ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

Captain Cook's boomerang set for auction

Posted August 20, 2008 21:15:00

An Aboriginal boomerang collected by Britain's Captain James Cook on his first trip to Australia - which was then New Holland - in 1770 but lost to public sight ever since goes on sale next month.

The boomerang, which is expected to fetch up to 60,000 pounds ($128,000), comes from the collection of Cook's widow Elizabeth and was passed on to the current owner as an inheritance.

Its rarity lies in the fact that it is from the first contacts between Indigenous Australians and Europeans.

Auction house Christie's said Cook was unaware of the function of the boomerang because often the Aborigines ran away from his men when they came ashore.

It was simply described as a wooden weapon and it was only years later when settlers began to arrive that its purpose and function began to be understood.

Two wooden clubs from the same collection and believed to have been collected on the same voyage will also be on offer at the Exploration and Travel sale in London on September 25.

- Reuters

Tags: community-and-society, history, indigenous, human-interest, 18th-century, australia, united-kingdom, england

Watch

Moon, Venus and Jupiter 'smiling' through the trees

Celestial happiness

Venus and Jupiter align with the moon to create a smiling face in the sky.

Opinion

Mumbai takes stock after terrorist attacks

Change of tactics

Other terrorist groups will now be studying the modus operandi of the Mumbai attacks.

Feature

A baby koala clings to its mother's back

GPS koalas

Phone-savvy science is tracking the breeding habits of koalas.