
William John Wills
In 1860-61
Robert O'Hara Burke and William John Wills led an expedition of
19 men with the intention of crossing Australia from Melbourne
in the south to the Gulf of Carpentaria
in the north, a distance of around 3,250 kilometres
(≈2,000 miles). At that time most of the inland of Australia
had not been explored by non-indigenous people and was completely
unknown to the European settlers.
The south-north leg was successfully completed (except they were
stopped by swampland 5 kilometres (3 miles) from the northern
coastline) but owing to poor leadership and bad luck, both of the
expedition's leaders died on the return journey. Altogether, seven
men lost their lives, and only one man,
John King, travelled the entire
expedition and returned alive to Melbourne.
Beginning
Gold was
discovered in Victoria
in 1851 and the subsequent gold rush led to a huge influx of
migrants. The colony became fantastically wealthy and
Melbourne grew rapidly to became Australia's largest city and the
second largest city of the
British
Empire. The
boom lasted forty
years and ushered in the era known as "
marvellous Melbourne".
The influx of educated
gold seekers from England
, Ireland
and Germany
led to rapid
growth of schools, churches, learned societies, libraries and art
galleries. The University of Melbourne
was founded in 1855 and the
State Library of
Victoria
in 1856. The
Philosophical Institute of Victoria was founded in
1854 and became the
Royal Society of Victoria after
receiving a Royal Charter in
1859.
Exploration Committee
In 1857 the Philosophical Institute formed an
Exploration
Committee with the aim of investigating the practicability of
fitting out an exploring expedition.
While interest in
inland exploration was strong in the neighbouring colonies of
New South
Wales
and South Australia
, in Victoria enthusiasm was limited. Even
the anonymous donation of £1,000 to the
Fund Raising
Committee of the Royal Society failed to generate much
interest and it was 1860 before sufficient money was raised and the
expedition was assembled.
The Exploration Committee called for offers of interest for a
leader for the
Victorian Exploring Expedition. Only two
members of the Committee,
Ferdinand von Mueller and
Wilhelm Blandowski, had any experience in
exploration but due to
factionalism both were consistently
outvoted. Several people were considered for the post of leader and
the Society held a range of meetings in early 1860.
Burke was selected by committee ballot
as the leader, and
Wills was
recommended as surveyor, navigator and third-in-command. Burke had
no experience in exploration and it is strange that he was chosen
to lead the expedition.
Burke was an Irish
-born
ex-officer with the Austrian
army, and later became police superintendent with
virtually no skills in bushcraft. Wills was more adept than
Burke at living in the wilderness, but it was Burke's leadership
that was especially detrimental to the mission.
Rather than take cattle to be slaughtered during the trip the
Committee decided to experiment with dried meat instead. The extra
weight required three extra wagons and was to slow the expedition
down significantly.
Camels
Camels had been used successfully in
desert
exploration in other parts of the world, but by
1859 only seven camels had been imported into
Australia.
The
Victorian Government appointed
George James Landells to purchase 24 camels in India
for use in
desert exploration. The camels arrived in
Melbourne
in June 1860 and the
Exploration Committee purchased an additional six camels from
George Coppin's Cremorne Gardens.
The camels
were initially housed in the stables at Parliament
House
and later moved to Royal Park
. Twenty-six camels were taken on the
expedition, with six camels (two females with their two young
calves and two male camels) being left in Royal Park.
Members of the Exploration Committee
The Exploration Committee of the Royal Society of Victoria included
the following prominent Victorians;
- Sir William Foster Stawell, Chief Justice of Victoria,
- Dr David Elliott Wilkie MD., Treasurer.
- Dr John Macadam, Honorary
Secretary.
- Professor Georg
Neumayer,
- Dr Ferdinand von Mueller,
Government Botaninst,
- Sir Frederick McCoy, Melbourne University's first
professor,
- The Hon. Captain Andrew Clarke,
- Dr Richard Eades, Mayor of
Melbourne,
- Charles Whybrow Ligar, Government Surveyor General,
- The Hon Sir Francis Murphy, Speaker of the Legislative
Assembly,
- Lieutenant John Randall Pascoe, JP.,
- Captain Francis
Cadell,
- Alfred Selwyn Esq.,
Government Geologist,
- Reverend Father John Ignatius Bleasdale,
- Clement Hodgkinson Esq,
- Dr J William McKenna,
- Mr Edward Wilson,
Editor of the Argus,
- Dr William Gilbee,
- Sizar Elliott Esq,
- Dr Solomon Iffla,
- Angus McMillan Esq,
- James Smith Esq,
- John Watson Esq.
Departure

Map of the Burke and Wills
expedition
The
expedition set off from Royal Park, Melbourne
at about 4pm on 20 August 1860
watched by around 15,000 spectators. The 19 men of the
expedition included five Englishmen
, six Irishmen
, four Indian
sepoys, three Germans
and an
American
. They took twenty-three horses, six wagons
and twenty-six
camels.
There was an enormous amount of equipment; enough food to last two
years, a cedar-topped oak camp table with two chairs, rockets,
flags and a Chinese gong; the equipment all together weighed as
much as 20 tonnes.
As committee member Captain Francis Cadell had opposed
his appointment as leader of the expedition, Burke refused his
offer to transport the supplies to Adelaide
by ship and then up the Murray
and Darling
Rivers to be collected on the way, everything was
instead loaded onto six wagons. One wagon broke down
before it had even left Royal Park and by midnight of the first day
the expedition had only reached Essendon
on the edge of Melbourne. At Essendon two
more wagons broke down. Heavy rains and bad roads made travelling
through Victoria difficult and time-consuming.
The party arrived at
Lancefield
on 23 August and set up their fourth camp.
The first
day off was taken on Sunday, 26 August 1860 at
Camp VI in Mia
Mia
.
The
expedition reached Swan
Hill
on 6 September 1860 and arrived
in Balranald
on 15 September 1860.
There, to lighten the load, they left behind their sugar, lime
juice and some of their guns and ammunition. At Gambala on 24
September, Burke decided to load some of the provisions onto the
camels for the first time, and to lessen the burden on the horses
ordered the men to walk. He also ordered personal luggage be
restricted to .
At Bilbarka on the Darling
Burke and his second-in-command, Landells, argued
after Burke decided to dump the 60 gallons (≈270 litres) of rum
that Landells had brought to feed to the camels in the belief that
it prevented them from getting scurvy.
At
Kinchega
on the Darling, Landells resigned from the
expedition, followed by the expedition's surgeon, Dr Hermann Beckler.
Third-in-command Wills was promoted to second-in-command.
They
reached Menindee
on October 12 having taken two months to travel
from Melbourne - the regular mail coach did the journey in little
more than a week. Two of the expedition's five officers had
resigned, thirteen members of the expedition had been fired and
eight new men had been hired.
In July 1859 the
South
Australian government offered a reward of £2000 (about
A$230,000 in 2003 dollars) for the first
successful south-north crossing of the continent west of the 143rd
line of
longitude. The experienced
explorer
John McDouall Stuart
had taken up the challenge. Burke was concerned Stuart might beat
him to the north coast and he soon grew impatient with their slow
progress often averaging only an hour. Burke split the group,
taking the strongest horses, seven of the fittest men and a small
amount of equipment, with plans to push on quickly to
Coopers Creek and then wait for the others to
catch up. They left Menindee on 19 October, guided by
William Wright who was appointed
third-in-command. Travel was relatively easy because recent rain
made water abundant while unusually mild weather saw temperatures
exceed only twice before reaching Coopers Creek. At Torowotto
Swamp Wright was sent back to Menindee alone
to bring up the remainder of the men and supplies and Burke
continued on to Coopers Creek.
Coopers Creek
In 1860 Coopers Creek was the edge of the land that had been
explored by Europeans; the river having been visited by
Captain Charles Sturt in 1845 and
Augustus Charles Gregory in 1858. Burke
arrived at the Cooper on November 11 and they formed a depôt at
Camp LXIII (Camp 63) while they conducted reconnaissance to the
north. A plague of rats forced the men to move camp and they formed
a second depôt further downstream at Bullah Bullah Waterhole. This
was Camp LXV (Camp 65) and they erected a stockade and named the
place Fort Wills.
It was thought that Burke would wait at Coopers Creek until Autumn
(March the next year) so they would avoid having to travel during
the hot Australian summer.
However, Burke only waited until December
16, before deciding to make a dash for the Gulf of
Carpentaria
. He split the group again, leaving William
Brahe in charge of the Depôt, with Dost Mahomet, William Patton and
Thomas McDonough. Burke, Wills,
John King and Charles Gray set off for
the Gulf with six camels, one horse and enough food for just three
months. By now it was mid summer and the daily temperature often
reached in the shade with very little shade to be found. Brahe was
ordered by Burke to wait for three months however, Wills secretly
instructed him to extend it to four months.
The Gulf of Carpentaria

The return journey
Except for the heat travel was easy, due to recent rains water was
still easy to find and the
Aboriginals, contrary to
expectations, were peaceful.
On 9 February 1861 they reached the Little
Bynoe River, an arm of the Flinders River
delta where they found they could not reach the
ocean because of the Mangrove swamps in
their way. Burke and Wills left the camels behind with King
and Gray at Camp CXIX (Camp 119), and set off through the swamps,
although after they decided to turn back. When they turned back
they were by this stage desperately short of supplies. They had
food left for 27 days, however it had already taken them 59 days to
travel from Coopers Creek.
On their way north, the weather had been hot and dry, but on the
way back the wet season broke and the tropical monsoonal rains
began. A camel named
Golah Sing was abandoned on March 4
when it was unable to continue.
Three other camels were shot and eaten along
the way and they shot their only horse, Billy, on April 10
on the Diamantina
River
, south of today's town of Birdsville
. Equipment was abandoned at a number of
locations as the number of pack animals was reduced. One of these
locations, Return Camp 32 was relocated in 1994 and The Burke and
Wills Historical Society mounted an expedition to verify the
discovery of camel bones in 2005.
To extend their food supply they ate
portulaca, Gray also caught an
Python (probably
Aspidites melanocephalus,
a black-headed python), which they ate. Both Burke and Gray
immediately came down with
dysentery. Gray
was ill, but Burke thought he was "gammoning" (pretending).
On March
25, on the Burke River near today's town of Boulia
, Gray was
caught stealing skilligolee (a type of watery porridge) and Burke
beat him. By April 8, Gray couldn't walk. Gray died on April
17 of
dysentery at a place they called
Polygonum Swamp.
The location of Gray's death is unknown,
although it is generally believed to be Lake Massacre in South Australia
. While the possibility that Burke killed
Gray has been discounted, the severity of the beating Burke gave
has been widely debated. The three surviving men stopped for a day
to bury Gray, and to recover their strength – they were by this
stage very weak from hunger and exhaustion. They finally reached
Coopers Creek on April 21, only to find the camp had been abandoned
several hours earlier. Brahe may have stayed longer but one of his
men, Patton, had injured his leg after being thrown from his horse
and they decided to leave for Menindee that morning. Patton was to
die from complications six weeks later. Burke and Wills discussed
catching up with him but they were too exhausted and decided to
wait.
Meanwhile the other mission led by William Wright was having
terrible problems of its own. Wright was supposed to bring supplies
up from Menindee to Coopers Creek, but it was the end of January
1861 before he managed to set out from Menindee. Wright's delay
subsequently resulted in him being blamed for the deaths of Burke
and Wills.
Alan Moorehead wrote of
the 'mystery' surrounding Wright's delay;
- "There was no basis here for criminal proceedings against
Wright, but he had been publicly condemned as the man on whom the
guilt chiefly lay, and that was a reputation that he was unlikely
ever to lie down. He retired to obscurity in Adelaide, leaving
behind him still a slight, persistant mystery: why had he really
delayed? Was it only because he wanted to make sure of his salary?
Was it because he did not want to leave his wife and family and the
comforts of the settled districts? Was it merely that he was
stupid, lazy and indifferent: a man too mean-spirited to think of
anyone but himself? Or was it just posible that he was the victim
of that same fated chain of errors that had bedevilled the
expedition from the beginning? These were questions that would
never be fully answered." Cooper's Creek, p. 192.
An in-depth study of Wright's action formed a part of Dr Tom
Bergin's 1982 MA Thesis at the University of New England. Dr Bergin
showed a lack of money and too few pack animals to carry the
supplies meant Wright was placed in an unenviable position. His
requests to the Exploration Committee were not acted on until early
January, by which time the hot weather and lack of water meant the
party moved incredibly slowly. They were harassed by the Bandjigali
and Karenggapa
Murri, and three of
the men,
Dr Ludwig Becker, Charles
Stone and William Purcell, died from malnutrition on the trip. On
his way north, Wright camped at Koorliatto Waterhole on the Bulloo
River while he tried to find Burke's tracks to Coopers Creek. While
he was there he met Brahe who was on his way back from the Cooper
to Menindee.
Return to Cooper's Creek
Burke had asked Brahe and the depôt party to remain at the depôt
camp on the Cooper for 13 weeks. The depôt party actually waited
for 18 weeks and was running low on supplies and starting to feel
the effects of scurvy; they had come to believe that Burke would
never return from the Gulf. After one of his men broke a leg, Brahe
decided to leave Coopers Creek and return to Menindee, but before
leaving buried some provisions in case Burke did return, and blazed
(cut or carved) a message on a tree to mark the spot.
Brahe left the depot at Coopers Creek on Sunday 21 April 1861.
Burke, Wills and King returned that evening. Finding the depot camp
deserted, they dug up the cache of supplies, and a letter
explaining that the party had given up waiting and had left only
that morning. Burke's team had missed them by only 9 hours. The
three men and two remaining camels were exhausted; they had no hope
of catching up to the main party.
They decided to rest and recuperate, living off the supplies which
had been left in the cache.
Wills and King wanted to follow the "old
track" to Menindee but Burke overuled them and decided to follow
the creek in an attempt to reach the furthest outpost of pastoral
settlement in South
Australia
, a Cattle station near Mount Hopeless. This
would mean travelling southwest through the desert for 240
kilometres (150 miles). They wrote a letter explaining their
intentions and reburied it in the cache under the marked tree in
case a rescue party visited the area. Unfortunately, they did not
change the mark on the tree or alter the date. On April 23 they set
out into the
Strzelecki Desert
towards Mount Hopeless in an attempt to effect their own
rescue.
Meanwhile, while returning to Menindee, Brahe had met with Wright
trying to reach the Cooper with the supplies. The two men decided
to go back to the depôt camp on the Cooper and check to see if
Burke had returned. When they arrived on May 8, Burke had already
left for Mount Hopeless, and the camp was again deserted. Burke and
Wills were 35 miles (56 km) away by this point. As the mark
and date on the tree were unaltered, Brahe and Wright assumed that
Burke had not returned, and did not think to check to see if the
supplies were still buried. They left to rejoin the main party and
return to Menindee.
The Dig Tree
The tree
at the depôt camp that Brahe blazed to mark the location of the
buried supplies on the banks of Bullah Bullah Waterhole on Cooper's Creek in south-west Queensland
is a coolibah,
(Eucalyptus coolibah formerly Eucalyptus
microtheca) estimated to be around 250 years old.
Initially the tree was known as "Brahe's Tree" or the "Depot Tree"
and the tree under which Burke died attracted most attention and
interest. As a result of the blaze on the tree and the subsequent
popularity of the book "
Dig" written in 1935 by Frank
Clune, the tree became known as the "
Dig Tree". There are
three separate blazes on the tree; the camp number, a date blaze
and the instruction to dig. Two of the blazes have grown closed and
only the camp number blaze remains visible today.
The date blaze indicated the date of arrival and the date of
departure "DEC-6-60" carved over "APR-21-61". The camp number blaze
shows the initial "B" (for Burke) carved over the Roman numerals
for (camp) 65; "B" over "LXV". The exact "DIG" inscription that
Brahe carved is not known. It is variously recalled to be "DIG
under" or "DIG 3 FEET N.W." or "DIG 40 FEET N.E." or "DIG 21 APR
61" or a combination of these.
In 1899 John Dick carved a likeness of Burke's face in a nearby
tree along with his initials, his wife's initials and the
date.
Burke, Wills and King alone at Coopers Creek
After leaving the Dig Tree they never travelled more than a day. Of
the two remaining camels, Rajah and Landa, one became irretreviably
stuck in a waterhole and the other died. Without pack animals,
Burke, Wills and King were unable to carry enough water to later
leave the creek and cross the Strzelecki Desert to Mt Hopeless, and
so the three men were forced to return to Coopers Creek. Their
supplies were running low and they were exhausted. The Cooper Creek
Aborigines, the Yandruwandha
people, gave them fish, beans called 'padlu' and a type of
damper made from the ground
sporocarps of the ngardu (nardoo) plant
(
Marsilea drummondii)
in exchange for sugar.
Wills returned to the Dig Tree to put his diary, notebook and
journals in the cache for safekeeping. Burke bitterly criticised
Brahe in his journal for not leaving behind any supplies or
animals.
Encounters with Aborigines
During their journey, Burke and Willis were rescued several times
by well-fed Aborigines, who were experts in surviving at the
desert. During the last encounter, Burke foolishly shot his pistol
at one of the Aborigines, causing the whole group to flee. Within a
month after the Aborigines' departure, Burke and Willis both
perished.
Death

Artist's depiction of Burke's
death
The three men lived on Coopers Creek, collecting ngardu sporocarps
and accepting gifts of fish and baked rats from the
Yandruwandha.
Towards the end of June 1861, Burke and King decided to return
upstream to the Dig Tree to see if a rescue party had arrived.
Wills became too weak to continue, so he was left behind at his own
insistence at Breerily Waterhole with some food, water and shelter.
Burke and King continued upstream for another two days until Burke
became too weak to continue. The next morning Burke died. King
stayed with his body for two days and then returned downstream to
Breerily Waterhole where he found that Wills had died as
well.
The exact date that Burke and Wills died is unknown and different
dates are given on various memorials in Victoria. The Exploration
Committee fixed June 28, 1861 as the date both explorers died. King
found a tribe of Yandruwandha willing to give him food and shelter
and in return he shot birds to contribute to their supplies.
In Melbourne, several rescue parties had been mounted.
John McKinlay led the
South Australian Burke
Relief Expedition,
William
Landsborough led the
Queensland Relief Expedition,
Captain William Henry Norman sailed the sloop-of-war
HMS Victoria to the Albert
River on the Gulf of Carpentaria,
Frederick Walker led the
Victorian Relief
Expedition and
Alfred William
Howitt set off from Melbourne for Coopers Creek.
Howitt arrived at the Dig Tree on September 11, 1861 and four days
later found King living with the Yandruwandha. In pitiful
condition, King survived the slow trip back to Melbourne, and died
eleven years later, aged 33, having never recovered his health. He
is buried in the Melbourne General Cemetery.
Cause of Death
Unbeknown to the explorers, ngardu sporocarps contain
thiaminase which depletes the body of
Vitamin B1 (
Thiamin). It
is probable that they were not preparing the
seedcakes in accordance with Aboriginal food
preparation methods, as the food was a staple among the local
people. It has been argued that they did not make the food into the
requisite paste to begin with, which may have nullified deleterious
effects they suffered. Despite eating the men got weaker and
weaker. Wills wrote in his diary:
"My pulse is at 48 and very weak and my legs and
arms are nearly skin and bone.
I can only look out like Mr Micawber for something to turn up, but
starvation on nardoo is by no means unpleasant, but for the
weakness one feels, and the utter inability to move oneself, for as
the appetite is concerned, it gives me the greatest
satisfaction."
As a result, it is likely that the deaths of Burke and Wills
resulted in part from a Thiamin deficiency called
Beriberi. Evidence to this effect is further
provided by King's account, in which it is revealed that Burke
complained of leg and back pain shortly before his death.
Cooper's Creek summary
- 11 November 1860. Burke, Wills, King, Gray, Brahe, Mahomet,
Patton and McDonough made their first camp on what they thought was
Cooper's Creek, but which was actually the Wilson River. This was
Camp LVII (Camp 57).
- 20 November 1860. The first Depôt Camp was established at Camp
LXIII (Camp 63).
- 6 December 1860. The Depôt Camp was moved downstream to Camp
LXV - The Dig Tree (Camp 65).
- 16 December 1860. Burke, Wills, King and Gray left the Depôt
for the Gulf of Carpentaria.
- 16 December 1860-21 April 1861. Brahe is left in charge of the
Depôt at Coopers Creek.
- 21 April 1861. Brahe buried a cache of supplies, carved a
message in the Dig Tree and headed back to Menindee. Later that
day, Burke, Wills and King returned from the Gulf to find the camp
deserted.
- 23 April 1861. Burke, Wills and King followed the Cooper
downstream heading towards Mt Hopeless in South Australia.
- 7 May 1861. The last camel, Rajah, died. The men cannot carry
enough supplies to leave the creek.
- 8 May 1861. Brahe and Wright return to the Dig Tree. They
stayed only 15 minutes and did not dig up Burke's note in the
cache.
- 30 May 1861. Wills, having failed to reach Mt Hopeless,
returned to the Dig Tree to bury his notebooks in the cache for
safe-keeping.
- End of June/ early July 1861. Burke and Wills died.
- 11 September 1861. Alfred William Howitt, leader of the
Victorian Burke Relief Expedition arrived at the Dig Tree.
- 15 September 1861. Howitt found John King, the only survivor of
the four men who reached the Gulf.
- 28 September 1861. Howitt dug up the cache at the 'Dig Tree'
and recovered Wills' notebooks.
Deaths on the Victorian Exploring Expedition
- Charley Gray, Wednesday April 17, 1861 at Polygonum Swamp.
- Charles Stone, Monday April 22, 1861 at Koorliatto Waterhole,
Bulloo River.
- William Purcell, Tuesday April 23, 1861 at Koorliatto
Waterhole, Bulloo River.
- Dr Ludwig Becker, Monday April
29, 1861 at Koorliatto Waterhole, Bulloo River.
- William Patten, Wednesday June 5, 1861 near Desolation Camp,
Rat Point.
- William John Wills, the
official date of death adopted by the Exploration Committee was
Wednesday June 28, 1861, but Wills probably died around Friday June
30 or Saturday July 1, 1861 at Breerily Waterhole, Coopers
Creek.
- Robert O'Hara Burke, the
official date of death adopted by the Exploration Committee was
Wednesday June 28, 1861, but Burke probably died on Saturday July
1, 1861 at Burkes Waterhole, Coopers Creek.
Afterwards
The Victorian Government held a Commission of Enquiry into the
deaths of Burke and Wills. Howitt was sent back to Coopers Creek to
recover the bodies of Burke and Wills and the explorers were given
a state funeral in Melbourne on Wednesday, 21 January 1863. The
funeral car was modelled on the design used for the
Duke of Wellington
ten years earlier. There were reported to have been 40,000
spectators. Burke and Wills were buried at the Melbourne General
Cemetery.
In some ways the tragic expedition was not a waste of time. It had
completed the picture of inland Australia, and proved that there
was no inland sea. More importantly, each of the rescue parties
sent from different parts of the continent added in some way to the
understanding of the land it crossed.
In 1862 a
memorial was erected overlooking the town of Castlemaine
where Burke had been stationed before leading the
expedition. The Victorian towns of Bendigo
, Ballarat
and Fryerstown also erected monuments. In
1890 a monument was erected at Royal Park, the expedition's
departure point in Melbourne. The plaque on the monument states:
- This memorial has been erected to mark the spot from whence
the Burke and Wills Expedition started on 20 August 1860.
After successfully accomplishing their mission the two brave
leaders perished on their return journey at Coopers Creek in June
1861.
In 1983 they were honoured on a
postage
stamp depicting their portraits issued by
Australia Post [37533].
A 1985 film,
Burke & Wills,
was made about the expedition with
Jack Thompson as Burke, and
Nigel Havers as Wills.
See also
References
Further reading
- The [Melbourne] Argus, 1861. "The Burke and
Wills exploring expedition: An account of the crossing the
continent of Australia from Cooper Creek to Carpentaria, with
biographical sketches of Robert O'Hara Burke and William John
Wills." Melbourne: Wilson and Mackinnon.
- Bergin, Thomas John, & Australian Broadcasting Corporation,
1981. In the steps of Burke and Wills. Sydney: Australian
Broadcasting Commission. ISBN 0-642-97413-6.
- Bergin, Thomas John, & Readers Digest, 1996. Across the
outback.. Surrey Hills: Readers Digest. ISBN
0-86449-019-4.
- Bonyhady, Tim, 1991. Burke and Wills: From Melbourne to
myth. Balmain: David Ell Press. ISBN 0-908197-91-8.
- Burke and Wills Outback Conference 2003, 2005. The
Inaugural Burke & Wills Outback Conference: Cloncurry 2003 : a
collation of presentations. Dave Phoenix, Cairns Qld. ISBN
0-646-44702-5
- Manning Clark's History of Australia, 1995, London:
Pimlico, ISBN 0-7126-6205-7, Chapter 7: "Glory, Folly and Chance",
pp. 281-295
- Clune, Frank, 1937. Dig: A drama of central Australia.
Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
- Colwell, Max, 1971. The journey of Burke and Wills.
Sydney: Paul Hamlyn. ISBN 0-600-04137-9.
- Corke, David G, 1996. The Burke and Wills Expedition: A
study in evidence. Melbourne: Educational Media International.
ISBN 0-909178-16-X.
- Earl, John W, & McCleary, Barry V, 1994. "Mystery of the
poisoned expedition." Nature,. Vol. 368.
- Ferguson, Charles D, 1888. Experiences of a Forty-Niner
during the thirty-four years residence in California and
Australia. Cleveland, Ohio: The Williams Publishing Co.
- Fitzpatrick, Kathleen, 1963. "The Burke and Wills Expedition
and the Royal Society of Victoria." Historical Studies of
Australia and New Zealand. Vol. 10 (No. 40),
pp. 470-478.
- Judge, Joseph, & Scherschel, Joseph J, 1979, February 1979.
"First across Australia: The journey of Burke and Wills."
National Geographic Magazine, Vol. 155,
pp. 152-191.
- Moorehead, Alan McCrae, 1963. Coopers Creek. London:
Hamish Hamilton.
- Murgatroyd, Sarah, 2002. The Dig Tree. Melbourne: Text
Publishing. ISBN 1-877008-08-7.
- Phoenix, Dave, 2003. From Melbourne to the Gulf: A brief
history of the VEE of 1860-1. Cairns: Self published.
- Victoria: Parliament, 1862. Burke and Wills
Commission. Report of the Commissioners appointed to
enquire into and report upon the circumstances connected with the
sufferings and death of Robert O'Hara Burke and William John *
Wills, the Victorian Explorers. Melbourne: John Ferres
Government Printer.
- White, John, 1992. Burke and Wills: The stockade and the
tree. Footscray, Vic: The Victoria University of Technology
Library in association with Footprint Press.
External links