[Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia by Charles Sturt]@TWC D-Link bookTwo Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia CHAPTER III 18/54
It appears, that before the blacks proceeded to extremities, they furnished the Irishmen, who were unarmed, with weapons, and then told them to defend themselves, but whether against equal or inferior numbers, I am uninformed.
One of them soon fell, which the other observing, he took his knife out, and cut the throats of both the dogs before the blacks had time to put him to death. He was, however, sacrificed; and both the men were eaten by the tribe generally.
I questioned several on the subject, but they preserved the most sullen silence, neither acknowledging nor denying the fact. ARBUTHNOT'S RANGE. Mr.Hume had been one day on Mount Harris, and while there, had laid his compass on a large rock, near to which Mr.Oxley's boat had been burnt. To his surprise, he found the needle affected; and his bearings were all wrong.
I subsequently went up to ascertain the extent of the error produced, and found it precisely the same as Mr.Hume noticed.
When I placed the compass on the rock, Mount Foster bore from me N.by W., the true bearing of the one hill from the other being N.N.W.My placing my notebook under the compass did not alter the effect, nor did the card move until I raised the instrument a couple of feet above the stone, when it first became violently agitated, and then settled correctly; and my bearings of the highest parts of Arbuthnot's Range, and of its centre, were as follows: Mount Exmouth to the N ......
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