Glenormiston station, c1930

Bedourie, QLD
Australia
24° 21' 34.7832" S, 139° 28' 15.4236" E
1 January 1930
3 May 2011
3 May 2011

Location

Bedourie, QLD
Australia
24° 21' 34.7832" S, 139° 28' 15.4236" E

Queensland State Archives

four miles to an inch

Glenormiston station, c1930. This black and white photostat map shows Glenormiston station in far western Queensland. Pituri was traded north along the Georgina River into Wangka-yutyurru country and south along the Mulligan River into the major trade networks that operated in the Lake Eyre Basin. The station homestead, where J.A. Coghlan lived in the 1890s, is positioned on Pituri Creek, near Lake Idamea and not far west from the Georgina River. After Coghlan had moved on as manager and ownership had changed hands, in 1922, when portions of Glenormiston were going to be resumed, the Assessing Commissioner J. Kingston described the country as made up of: open and broken downs, low limestone ridges, river and creek flats, scalded and inferior flats and rough hills. The commissioner noted, ‘It is light carrying country, but is safe if not overstocked and is excellent country for raising and fattening heavy cattle.’ Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Duboisia myoporoidis (pituri), 1923

Duboisia myoporoidis (pituri) by Adam Forster, 1923. Collection of the National Library of Australia

Location

Australia

For Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders, everything in the landscape has its place of importance according to spiritual beliefs systems, and knowledge of this has been handed down orally

William Hodgkinson, North West Exploration Party, 1876

1 January 1877
13 October 2010
13 October 2010
Survey Branch, Lands Department
1:1,267,200

Hodgkinson exploring the Mulligan River and 'opening up' the west. 'Map shewing route traversed by North Western Exploration Party commanded by W.O. Hodgkinson, Queensland, 1876'. From Queensland Parliamentary Papers, 3, 1877. Collection of the National Library of Australia

Which way did Ludwig Leichhardt go? He must have passed through here. The sand dunes of far west Queensland must hold a secret to the mystery.

Pituri bag, c1897. Collection of the Queensland Museum

Collection of the Queensland Museum

When pituri was traded throughout Central Australia it was carried in beautiful bags like this one. This bag was collected by J.A.

An important aspect of a distinct Aboriginal culture derives from the tradition of travel, and the tangible and intangible goods that were traded along communication routes that criss-crossed Austr

Syndicate content