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The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, Volume XXXIII
The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, Volume XXXIII

The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, Volume XXXIII

Date1863
Object number00019793
NameBook
MediumInk on paper, leather, marbled boards, gilt
DimensionsOverall: 222 x 145 x 45 mm, 0.85 kg
ClassificationsBooks and journals
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA book titled 'The Journal of The Royal Geographical Society of London Vol.XXXIII'. Contents relating to Australia and the Pacific include: 1.- Exploration of the Lower Course of the River Burdekin, in Queensland, and its identification with the River Wickham. By George Elphinstone Dalrymple, Commissioner of Crown Lands in the Kennedy District of that Colony. 2.- Reports of the various Expeditions fitted out to relieve, or ascertain the fate of Messers. Burke and Wills. 8.- On the Physical Geography of the Malay Archipelago. By Alfred Russell Wallace, Esq., F.R.G.S. 13.- Diary of Mr. John M'Douall Stuart's Explorations from Adelaide across the Continent of Australia, 1861-62. HistoryThis bound copy of The Journal of The Royal Geographical Society of London is one of a series of held by the Australian National Maritime Museum ranging from 00019762 - 00019826 and covering the years 1831 - 1854. The Journal of The Royal Geographical Society of London was, and remains, a major source of first-hand information on European discovery and exploration during the Victorian era. From the first articles in volume one, papers on Swan River, botany, and the natives of King George's Sound, Australia plays a key role in this story. The Journal contains articles by Phillip Parker King, Allan Cunningham, Charles Sturt, Ludwig Leichhardt, and Owen Stanley - all key figures in the European story of Australia. These articles are often illustrated and accompanied by maps and charts. It places Australia in a context, so as well as articles on the BEAGLE by Robert FitzRoy and Charles Darwin there are articles such as 'On the Countries South of Abyssinia', or by David Livingston, a 'Memoir on Madagascar'. But the Journal is much more than a quaint relic. As volume follows volume we get a serial sense of the world unfolding, revealing its mysteries. Its frequently a romantic, exotic world, but imperial realities are never faraway.SignificanceThe Journal of the Royal Geographical Society is an exceedingly important source document for exploration worldwide in the 19th Century and European perceptions of the landscapes and people explorers were encountering.