City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Topsy-turvy world, how Australian animals puzzled early explorers, Kirsty Murray

Label
Topsy-turvy world, how Australian animals puzzled early explorers, Kirsty Murray
Language
eng
resource.governmentPublication
federal national government publication
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Intended audience
For primary school age
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Topsy-turvy world
Responsibility statement
Kirsty Murray
Sub title
how Australian animals puzzled early explorers
Summary
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
Target audience
primary
Classification

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