Source: Futility Closet
In 1860 a party of explorers set out to traverse the Australian continent, but bad management and a series of misfortunes sent it spiraling toward tragedy. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll tell the story of the Victorian Exploring Expedition and its dramatic climax at Cooper’s Creek.
We’ll also try to validate Archimedes and puzzle over an unlucky thief.
Intro:
In 1990 Jon Perez Laraudogoitia wrote a philosophy article that compelled its own acceptance.
In 1976 architect Robert Venturi found a way to commemorate a house with no surviving description.
Sources for our story on the Burke and Wills expedition:
Alan Moorehead, Cooper’s Creek, 1963.
Sarah P. Murgatroyd, The Dig Tree, 2002.
Dave Phoenix, Following Burke and Wills Across Australia: A Touring Guide, 2015.
Ian Clark and Fred Cahir, The Aboriginal Story of Burke and Wills: Forgotten Narratives, 2013.
A.W. Howitt, et al., “Exploring Expedition From Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria, Under the Command of Mr. Robert O’Hara Burke,” Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 32 (1862), 430-529.
The Diary of William John Wills.
William John Wills, A Successful Exploration Through the Interior of Australia: From Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria, 1863.
Dave Phoenix, “Burke and Wills — An Overview of the Expedition, Its Preparation, Planning and Outcomes,” Queensland History Journal 21:8 (2012), 497.
Jessica Campion, “Burke and Wills: Botany’s Untold Success Story,” Australian Geographic, July 27, 2011.
Bernie Joyce and Doug McCann, “The Scientific Legacy of Burke & Wills,” Australasian Science 32:5 (June 2011), 29-31.
Sally Woollett, “Thiamine and the Dig Tree Tragedy,” Chemistry in Australia 78:10 (November 2011), 4.
John W. Earl and…
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