Document information
Physical location:
90.11.00Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to the Australische Zeitung, 1890-11. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/90-11-00>, accessed September 11, 2025
1
Letter not found. For the text given here, see
‘Victoria-Spring wieder aufgefunden' [Victoria Spring found again],
Australische Zeitung, 19 November 1890, p. 6 (B90.11.06). M's text accompanies the published text of J.
Brooks to M, 25 August 1890 (in this edition as 90-08-25b) and is introduced by 'Der Herr B
aron von Müller bemerkt dazu
' [Baron von Muuller remarks on this].
The translation of this letter in
Bendigo advertiser
, 29 November 1890, p. 2 (B90.11.08) differs in some aspects from that given here.
The rediscovery of the Victoria Spring
is important in so far as Mr Giles
on his remarkable journey (the Sir Thomas Elder Expedition of 1875) had not brought
this permanent and remotely isolated water with the surrounding oasis into geographical
connection with a fixed point of the south coast. This place will now probably soon
become a sheep and cattle station and thereby also limit the cannibal horror there.
This place will also be important as a depot for exploring the country in all directions
from there and other water courses may also then be found. The new expedition that
your noble fellow citizen, Sir Thomas Elder, will soon now equip,
could probably also ascertain all this. Indeed many of the surrounding regions may
consist of sand hills, but even these could probably be transformed gradually into
pasture land with water-holding places by the wonderful West African coapim grass
(Panicum spectabile) introduced by me and other nutritive vegetation.
2
WA.
3
Ernest Giles.
4
Elder Scientific Exploring Expedition, 1891-2.
Panicum spectabile