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Topsy-turvy world : how Australian animals puzzled early explorers

To the first Europeans who came to Australia, everything seemed topsy turvy. Christmas was in the summer and trees shed their bark but not their leaves. And the animals were bizarre. There was a bird that laughed like a donkey and a type of greyhound that bound along on its hind legs like a hare. There was an animal in Tasmania whose nocturnal screeches sounded like the devil and a river creature that had a ducks bill at one end and a beavers tail at the other. The Europeans had never seen anything like these animals before and gave them names similar to those of the European creatures they already knew. They drew and painted odd pictures of them, showing they did not understand the animals habits. In one illustration, a wombat is standing on its back legs and in another a Tasmanian tiger is wrestling with a platypus of the same size.

Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date Res.
32320003397035 J591.994 MUR
Junior Non Fiction   East Maitland Library . . Available .  
32320003397159 J591.994 MUR
Junior Non Fiction   Maitland Library . . Available .  
32320003397076 J591.994 MUR
Junior Non Fiction   Rutherford Library . . Available .  
32320003422619 J591.994 MUR
Junior Non Fiction   Thornton Library . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 385704 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 385704 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9780642277497 (Hardcover) :
Classification Number J591.994 MUR
Author Murray, Kirsty
Title Topsy-turvy world : how Australian animals puzzled early explorers [BK]
Physical Description ill. ;
Series NSW Premier's Reading Challenge 5-6
Note Includes index.
To the first Europeans who came to Australia, everything seemed topsy turvy. Christmas was in the summer and trees shed their bark but not their leaves. And the animals were bizarre. There was a bird that laughed like a donkey and a type of greyhound that bound along on its hind legs like a hare. There was an animal in Tasmania whose nocturnal screeches sounded like the devil and a river creature that had a ducks bill at one end and a beavers tail at the other. The Europeans had never seen anything like these animals before and gave them names similar to those of the European creatures they already knew. They drew and painted odd pictures of them, showing they did not understand the animals habits. In one illustration, a wombat is standing on its back legs and in another a Tasmanian tiger is wrestling with a platypus of the same size.
Classification For primary school age.
Subject Animals -- Australia -- Juvenile literature
Europeans -- Australia -- Attitudes -- Juvenile literature
Catalogue Information 385704 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 385704 Top of page .
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