Early Tinnenburra blocks, 1863

Cunnamulla, QLD
Australia
28° 4' 4.3896" S, 145° 41' 0.996" E
1 January 1863
1 June 2011
1 June 2011

Location

Cunnamulla, QLD
Australia
28° 4' 4.3896" S, 145° 41' 0.996" E
Department of Lands

Department of Environment and Resource Management, 2011

Early Tinnenburra blocks, 1863. The first surveys of the Warrego River were conducted a few years after European settlers crossed from the Darling River. Drafted in 1863, this map shows the boundaries of early pastoral runs. The location of town reserves, sheep yards, waterholes, blazed trees and the Queensland-New South Wales border are also shown as well as the tentative outline of watercourses. Pastoral interests were closely tied to water as blocks rarely extend more than ten miles away from creeks and rivers. In this map, three ‘Tinnenburra’ blocks line the banks of Cuttaburra Creek, an offshoot of the Warrego River. These were later taken up by James Tyson and formed one of the largest pastoral stations in the world. The name ‘Tinnenburra’ probably comes from ‘Dinnenbooroo’, the Aboriginal name for a waterhole on the Cuttaburra. While both place and name were appropriated by Europeans, its appearance alludes to an Indigenous landscape beyond what is conventionally represented by maps. Collection of the Museum of Lands, Mapping and Surveying, DERM, Brisbane

In the days before roads and railway to Brisbane, the Fitzroy River provided all transport and communications for much of Central Queensland through the port of Rockhampton.

The Brisbane River divides Queensland’s capital city and threads its way through the suburbs and into its hinterland.

Syndicate content