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Captain James Cook, claimed
discoverer of the east coast of Australia, was one of England's ablest navigators and an
astronomer of note. He set out in the a ship the "Endeavour" in 1768, bound for
Tahiti, in order to make observations of the planet Venus. His orders, also provided for
charting the coasts of New Zealand and searching for "the Great South Land".
Leaving New Zealand in March, 1770, Cook sighted the south-east coast of Australia a few
weeks later. He discovered and named Botany Bay, carefully explored and mapped the coast
northward, and finally, on Possession Island in Torres Strait, took possession of the
whole eastern coast, naming it New South Wales. On a later voyage, he proved that there
was no large continent between New Zealand and South America, thus removing an old
misconception. He was killed by natives in the Sandwich Islands in 1779.

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