Torres
1606It cannot be doubted, that the "very large islands" seen by Torres,
at the 11th degree of south latitude, were the hills of Cape York;
or that his two months of intricate navigation were employed in
passing the strait which divides Terra Australia and New Guinea.
But the account of this and other discoveries, which Torres himself
addressed to the King of Spain, was so kept from the world, that
the existence of such a strait Was generally unknown, until 1770;
when it was again discovered and passed by our great circumnavigator Captain Cook.
Torres, it should appear, took the precaution to lodge a copy of his letter in the archives of Manila; for, after that city was taken by the British forces, in 1762, Mr. Dalrymple found out, and drew from oblivion, this interesting document of early discovery; and, as a tribute due to the enterprising Spanish navigator, he named the passage Torres' Strait; and the appellation now generally prevails.
Zeachen is said to have discovered the land of Arnhem and the
Zeachen
1618northern Van Diemen's Land, in 1618; and he is supposed, from
the first name, to have been a native of Arnhem, in Holland; and
that the second was given in honour of the governor-general of the
Indies.[1] But there are two important objections to the truth of this
vague account: first, no mention is made of Zeachen in the recital
of discoveries which preface the instructions to Tasman; nor is there
any, of the North Coast having been visited by the Dutch, in that
year: secondly, it appears from Valentyn's lives of the governors
of Batavia, that Van Diemen was not governor-general until
January 1, 1636.
The second expedition, mentioned in the Dutch recital, for the
Carstens
1623discovery of the Great South Land, "was undertaken in a yacht," in the
year 1617, "with little success;" and the journals and remarks were
not to be found. In January 1623, the yachts Pera and Arnhem,
- ↑ Hist. des Navigations aux Terres Aust. Tome I. p. 482