No one could have been more attentive to the features
of the interior than I was; nor could any one have
dwelt upon their peculiarities with more earnest attention.
It were hazardous to build up any new theory, however
ingenious it may appear. The conclusions into
which I have been led, are founded on actual observation
of the country through which I passed, and extend not
beyond my actual range of vision; unless my assuming
that the decline of the interior to the south has
been satisfactorily established, be considered premature.
If not, the features of the country certainly justify
my deductions; and it will be found that they were
still more confirmed by subsequent observation.—That
the Darling should have lost its current in its upper
branches, is not surprising, when the level nature
of the country into which it falls is taken into consideration;
neither does it surprise me that it should be stationary
in one place, and flowing in another; since, if, as
in the present instance, there is a great extent of
country between the two points, which may perhaps be
of considerable elevation, the river may receive tributaries,
whose waters will of course follow the general decline
of the country. I take it to be so in the case
before us; and am of opinion, that the lower branches
of the Darling are not at all dependent on its sources
for a current, or for a supply of water. I have
somewhere observed that it appeared to me the depressed
interior over which I had already travelled, was of
comparatively recent formation. And, by whatever
convulsion or change so extensive a tract became exposed,
I cannot but infer, that the Darling is the main channel
by which the last waters of the ocean were drained
off. The bottom of the estuary, for it cannot
be called a valley, being then left exposed, it consequently
remains the natural and proper reservoir for the streams
from the eastward, or those falling easterly from
the westward, if any such remain to be discovered.
From the junction of the Morumbidgee to the junction
of the new river, the Murray had held a W.N.W. course.
From the last junction it changed its direction to
the S.W., and increased considerably in size.
The country to the south was certainly lower than
that to the north; for, although both banks had features
common to each other, the flooded spaces were much
more extensive to our left than to our right.
Change of country.
We started on the morning of the 24th, all the lighter
from having got rid of the skiff, and certainly freer
to act in case the natives should evince a hostile
disposition towards us. As we proceeded down the
river, the appearances around us more and more plainly
indicated a change of country. Cypresses were
observed in the distance, and the ground on which they
stood was higher than that near the stream; as if it
had again acquired its secondary banks. At length
these heights approached the river so nearly as to
form a part of its banks, and to separate one alluvial
flat from another. Their summits were perfectly
level; their soil was a red sandy loam; and their
productions, for the most part, salsolae and misembrianthemum.
From this it would appear that we had passed through
a second region, that must at some time have been
under water, and that still retained all the marks
of a country partially subject to flood.