Wellesley's Islands.] TERRA AUSTRALIS; 
“ both were gone. We could not learn the object of this custom ; 
« but it is not, general, for the greater part of the people had all their 
“ teeth.” The rite of circumcision, which seemed to have been prac- 
tised upon two of the three natives at Horse-shoe Island, and of which 
better proofs were found in other parts of the Gulph of Carpentaria, 
is, I believe, novel in the history of Terra Australis. 
On Sweers’ Island, seven human skulls and many bones were 
found lying together, near three extinguished fires ; and a square 
piece of timber, seven feet long, which was of teak wood, and accord- 
ing to the judgment of the carpenter had been a quarter-deck carling 
of a ship, was thrown up on the western beach. On Bentinck’s Island 
I saw the stumps of at least twenty trees, which had been felled with 
an axe, or some sharp instrument of iron ; and not far from the 
same place were scattered the broken remains of an earthen jar. 
Putting these circumstances together, it seemed probable that some 
ship from the East Indies had been wrecked here, two or three years 
back ; that part of the crew had been killed by the Indians ; — and 
that the others had gone away, perhaps to the main land, upon rafts 
constructed after the manner of the natives. This could be no more 
than conjecture ; but it seemed to be so supported by the facts, that 
I felt anxious to trace the route of the unfortunate people, and to 
relieve them from the distress and danger to which they must be 
exposed. 
The advantages to be obtained here I137 a ship are briefly these: 
shelter against all winds in the Investigator’s Road, wood for fuel, 
fresh water, and a tolerable abundance of fish and turtle ; for to an- 
ticipate a little on the voyage, there are islands lying within reach of 
a boat from the Road, where the turtle are not disturbed by the 
Indians. Should it ever enter into the plan of an expedition, to penetrate 
into the interior of Terra Australis from the head of the Gulph of 
Carpentaria, the Investigator’s Road is particularly well adapted for 
a ship during the absence of the travellers : the season most favour- 
able to their operations would be in May, June, and July ; but not so 
for the vessel, as the crew would probably be unable to procure 
147 
1802 . 
November. 
