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Views on the East Coast of Terra Australis ; Views on the East and North coasts of Terra Australis.

Authors :
Flinders, Matthew, 1774-1814
Westall, William, 1781-1850
Publication Year :
1814
Publisher :
G. & W. Nicol, 1814.

Abstract

14 views on 1 sheet. No. 1. Entrance of Port Jackson taken May 9, 1802 No. 2. Entrance of Broken Bay taken July 22, 1802 No. 3. View from near Cape Byron taken July 25, 1802 No. 4. Part of the great Sandy Peninsula taken July 28, 1802 No. 5 View from the entrance of Keppel Bay taken Aug. 17, 1802 No. 6. Cape Manifold taken Aug. 19, 1802 No. 7. Part of Harvey's Isles taken Aug. 21, 1802 No. 8. Cape Clinton taken Aug. 23, 1802 No. 9. Land on the north side of Port Bowen taken Aug. 24, 1802 No. 10. Murray's Isles in Torres Strait taken Oct. 29, 1802 No. 11. Murray's Isles taken Oct. 30, 1802 No. 12. North eastern part of the Prince of Wales' Islands taken Oct. 31, 1802 No. 13. Land on the north side of Blue-mud Bay taken Jan. 29, 1803 [No. 14]. Samow Strait taken from the north point of Rottee taken March 30, 1803. Westall was a Royal Academy artist appointed to Mathew Flinders voyage at 19 years of age. His method of drawing topographical views was to rule up his drawing sheets in a grid pattern to obtain an accurate perspective.<br />"One of the greatest of all classics of Australian exploration and discovery... Flinders' classic account of his voyage on board the Investigator records the full-scale expedition to discover and explore the entire coastline of Australia (which was the name that Flinders himself preferred and championed). The three volumes form a complete narrative of the expedition, including an authoritative introductory history of maritime exploration in Australian waters from the earliest times. The text contains a day-by-day account of the Investigator voyage and Flinders's later voyages on the Porpoise and the Cumberland. Robert Brown's "General Remarks, geographical and systematical, on the Botany of Terra Australis", which is illustrated by Ferdinand Bauer's botanical plates in the atlas, is printed as an appendix in the second volume. The text is illustrated by nine engraved plates and two double-page plates of coastal views in the atlas by the landscape painter William Westall, who travelled as official artist on the voyage. These are in many cases the very earliest views of the places visited and discovered on the voyage. Flinders' charts in the atlas were of such accuracy that they continued to be issued by the Admiralty for decades and form the basis of all modern charts of Australia. All the charts in the atlas here bear the imprint "W. & G. Nicol Pall Mall… 1814", an important point that identifies them all as being in the correct first issue form." (Hordern House, A unique assemblage of natural history, Item 11, 2019)<br />Hill, 614; Tooley, pp. 77-9; Wantrup, 67a. For the full text of Volume I and II see https://archive.org/details/voyageTerraAustv1Flin/page/n7/mode/2up and https://archive.org/details/voyageTerraAustv2Flin

Subjects

Subjects :
Australia
London

Details

Database :
LUNA Commons
Publication Type :
Map
Accession number :
edsluc.RUMSEY.8.1.331902.90100348
Document Type :
Exploration Book<br />View