Yep - I have the book (I think I got it signed by Les at a local promo event years ago. A fascinating read.
You can still buy the DVD from the ABC Shop - $30; plus the complete collection of the Bushtucker Man DVD series - $40 (on special till 8 September).
I think I'll be dropping some hints at home for my upcoming birthday........
Cheers, Dave
Anthropologists think Dutch survivors from Zuytdorp wrecked in 1712 at Shark Bay WA have descendents in the local indigenous community (Carpets of Silver- Playford)
The Dutch vessel Duyfken explored and charted the Gulf of Carpentaria in 1606. It was not wrecked on the Australia coast
Last edited by Grappler; 28th August 2014 at 12:57 PM. Reason: Correct typo from Gold to Silver
There are quite a few historic records of ships wrecked on the west coast and there were known survivors (from other survivors) that were never seen again - bit later rumours of light skinned and blond aborigines just inland from the west coast.
So it would seem there may have been whites living with aborigines and over time as the "black" gene is more dominant than the "white" gene these white features would slowly fade. I guess DNA testing was developed too late to test aboriginals in the area as white colonisation years later would disguise and earlier European DNA in the aboriginal population.
I doubt there was a population of 300 Europeans - where did they supposedly exist.
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
Thanks for sharing the Les Hiddens stuff.![]()
A comment on Q&A or was it Legally Black?, the other night that Muslims discovered Australia, got me googling
Turns out, some coins from the 10th century, have been found on Wessel Is
They were thought to have originated from a former African sultanate in Kilwa, near modern-day Tanzania
Read more: Coins found suggest Australia was discovered SIX CENTURIES before Captain Cook arrived on the island | Mail Online
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We can keep doing this almost ad infinitum - it was really discovered by whomever the aborigines used to be way back. Perhaps they ousted who was here before them.
I love finds of old coins in place. Unfortunately, they only give us an earliest possible date, not a latest possible date.
I just saw & bought the "total" Les Hiddins collection, 5CD set from the ABC shop,...I do remember Les, so I'm very much looking forward to viewing them.
Pickles.
As said above, some people from the Batavia wreck got ashore (Peter Fitzsimmons wrote a book about it I read recently) and there were certainly other Dutch wrecks.
It is said the Chinese first got here in 1421, but that story is disputed, like so many others.
Captain Cook didn't 'discover' Australia - people have been sailing boats to Australia for at least 50,000 years.
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