In 1860, Australia remained the truly dark continent.
Although there were European settlements in its south,
much of the north remained unknown and dangerous. But
things were changing. On 20th August, 1860, The
Victorian Exploring Expedition left Melbourne to make
the journey into the Gulf of Carpentaria in the northern
coast. The expedition was headed by an Irish policeman
called Robert O' Hara Burke - a charmer, gambler, and a
man infamous for taking long baths in his back garden.
Burke and his team of eighteen men made a confident
start. After leaving most of the group behind in Cooper
Creek (in central Australia), three of the party,
including Burke, reached the Carpentaria. They were the
first ever to do so. But the journey back was riddled
with mishap and bad luck. By the time the three had
returned to Cooper Creek, exhausted and starving, they
discovered that the rest of the party had retreated,
leaving behind only a carved message on a coolibah tree.
The ''Dig Tree'' is the tale of this tragic
expedition.Sarah Murgatroyd brings the story vividly
alive - the political events in the background, the
colourful characters, the spectacular and, often,
unforgiving landscape, and the awful desperation of the
final days. It is an intelligent, evocative and above
all, utterly gripping book. |
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