Under canvas, then wattle and daub huts.
they slept under the ship together
They didn't sleep in the day, they worked.
They just slept under the ship together.
They slept in special tent or built shacks or even slept on the ground thats why many people died because of the cold.
sleep
they didnt sleep on anything they were put to work and wee kept below deck they probably slept on nothing..
There were beds for anyone so people slept where there was space. Slaves and convicts were put in the hold, chained together, and left there.
they didnt sleep on anything they were put to work and wee kept below deck they probably slept on nothing..
The convicts of the First Fleet slept below decks, in the bottom part of the ship, on wooden bunks. Down each side of the convict ships were 2 tiers of wood bunks which were 1.8 meters square -the size of 2 single beds pushed together. 4 convicts would all have to share a bunk.
they slept under the ship together
They didn't sleep in the day, they worked.
They just slept under the ship together.
== == This depended on the time of their arrival in New South Wales and what the convicts actually did once they arrived in Australia. When they were being transported, they initially had bunks below decks, and were cramped and unconfortable, living in mostly dark, unhygienic conditions. Upon their arrival, the convicts of the First Fleet had tents, and later constructed barracks. Those who were lucky enough to find their skills being used later on by free settlers such as local farmers or businessmen had crude, but livable, quarters provided for them. Later on, women who were not hired out as servants lived in the Female Factory in Parramatta, which was a large, three-storey building which provided shelter but little warmth or comfortable conditions.
they sleep
Same place the sleep in the summer. It doesn't snow in Australia.
i believe so
Delta sleep is the first sleep to be made up after sleep has been lost. Stage 4 sleep.