Scarce c.19th colour printed map titled, Exploration Map of Australia, illustrating the progress of European inland exploration across the Australian continent during the nineteenth century.
The map presents the whole of Australia with coastal outlines, colonial boundaries, major rivers, mountain ranges, and principal settlements, overlaid with routes of exploration and regions differentiated by degree of survey and commercial development.
A key to colouring distinguishes between areas explored and opened to commercial enterprise, regions only partially explored, and tracts still regarded as unexplored, visually emphasising the contrast between the more densely settled eastern and south-eastern colonies and the vast interior. Named expeditions, tracks, and survey lines trace the work of explorers who traversed the interior deserts, river systems, and pastoral frontiers, situating geographical knowledge within the context of colonial expansion.
Graticule lines, coastal detail, and hydrographic features place the continent within its wider oceanic setting, including the Arafura Sea, Coral Sea, and Southern Ocean. The map reflects late nineteenth-century geographical scholarship and imperial interest in the economic potential of inland Australia, serving both educational and reference purposes.




