1 / 14

Terra Australis By Tyson E

Terra Australis By Tyson E. Content . First Australians Aboriginal Culture 18 th Century England The First Fleet Bound For Botany Bay (2 Slides) Point of View News Report . First Australians .

viho
Download Presentation

Terra Australis By Tyson E

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Terra Australis By Tyson E

  2. Content • First Australians • Aboriginal Culture • 18th Century England • The First Fleet • Bound For Botany Bay (2 Slides) • Point of View • News Report

  3. First Australians • The first Australians were aboriginals. The way they live is not like now. They build huts and shelter to sleep in. They make spears to kill fish and other animals for warmth. The way they kept warm was making a fire. The way they did that was to get a lot of wood and get two big rocks and keep smashing them together and that made the sparks go on the wood and then the fire started.

  4. Aboriginal Culture My story is about a kangaroo hopping near a creek looking at a lot of the things everywhere. The kangaroo was looking for friends as well because he was lonely.

  5. The Origin of Water Painting

  6. The Origin of Water Feelings • Feelings • I think Gula the rat would feel left out because no one thought he could do it. Then Gula was trying to find out where Bangarra the blue tongue lizard was hiding the water. When Gula found out where Bangarra was hiding the water Gula felt very proud of himself. All the other animals didn’t find out where Bangarra was hiding the water but Gula did.

  7. The Origin of Water • Prediction • An aboriginal was walking somewhere and pushed a stick in the ground and it cracked and there was water. The aboriginal kept doing it and made a river. • One day there was no water. The only way to get a drink was to lick Gulbirra. Gulbirra is kangaroo grass. There was a bandicoot called Gudjilla. He was walking and he saw Bangarra the lizard washing himself behind a rock. Gudgilla said “Are you hiding water from us?” Gudgilla called a meeting. He said “I will follow Bangarra everywhere he goes.

  8. The origin of Water 2# • He followed him but failed because he was to big. Gulbirra called another meeting JiggirrJiggirr the Willy Wag Tail said” I will follow him “ But he failed because his black tail would poke out of the tree branch. The Rat Gula said “ Let me try” All the animals laughed at him. Gula was following him. When Bangarra looked to the right Gula jumped to the left. When Bangarra looked to the left Gula would jump to the right. Gula jumped in front of Bangarra and scared him off. Gula told all of the other animals where the water was and they had a ball in the water. They made long zigzags holes to put the water in and made rivers.

  9. The Origin of Water Questions • Why would you hide something from your friends?

  10. 18th Century England In the 18th century England people got hung just for stealing something over 5 pounds. There were a lot of homeless and poor people. The rich people had a great time. The poor people didn’t like life at all because they had nothing to eat, or drink they had to steal.

  11. The First Fleet • Between 1788 and 1850 the English sent over 162,000 convicts to Australia in 806 ships. The first eleven of these ships are today known as the First Fleet and contained the convicts and marines that are now acknowledged as the Founders of Australia. This is their story. • Before 1788, Australia was populated by about 300,000 aborigines. These nomadic people had inhabited the world's oldest continent for more than 10,000 years. They had seen very few Europeans, but two events were to play an important part in changing their way of life forever. • Captain James Cook discovered the east coast of New Holland in 1770 and named it New South Wales. He sailed the whole of the coast and reported to the British government that he thought it would make a good place for a settlement. Britain did not recognise the country as being inhabited as the natives did not cultivate the land, and were, therefore, "uncivilized".

  12. Voyage of The First Fleet Portsmouth 13 May 1787 Tenerife 3 June 1787 Cape Town 13 October 1787 Botany Bay Rio De Janeiro 7 August 1787 Tasmania 1 January 1788 Port Jackson

  13. Bound for Botany Bay #1 • Who is singing this song? The convicts are singing the song. • Why are they singing it? They are singing it to amuse themselves. • Why are they saying ‘farewell to Old England forever?’ Because they might be away forever. • Where were they going? Why? They were going to Botany Bay in Australia.

  14. Bound for Botany Bay #2

More Related