When just one piece of tell apart is presented, the possibility of the Lusitanian disc overing Australia seems highly unlikely. However when all evidence is taken into consideration, the theory seems more plausible. Recently evidence has started to appear all over Australia that supports the claim. That Captain Cook was not the first European adventurer to set foot on Australia. Some people hasten claimed to have found evidence that the Lusitanian discovered the atomic number 99 slide of Australia in the 1520s.
Such evidence includes a Lusitanian Brass Cannon found in western sandwich Australia, The mahogany ship, Bitangabee Bay, Dauphin map, De Jode?s world Atlas and La Trobe?s keys.
The Portuguese Brass Cannon that was found on the Western marge of Australia is not an acceptable piece of evidence. The Portuguese brass ricochet was found in 1916 on an island in the North coast of Western Australia with a date (1512) carved on to the barrel. composition the brass cannon does seem to support the claim of the Portuguese discovering Australia, it is not related to the claim that the Portuguese discovered the easterly Coast in the 1520?s, because the cannon was found on the Western Coast of Australia.
The Mahogany ship, first sighted in the 1800s, is an insufferable piece of evidence.
The Mahogany ship was first sighted by English Australians in the Victorian town of Warrnambool in 1836. The substance of this ship is that the vessel did not resemble ships built in northern Europe in the 18th or nineteenth centuries and that the materials used to make the ship were foreign; which stands to suggest that Britain was not the first country to discover the east coast of Australia or maybe even Australia itself. The major flaw with this piece of evidence is the fact that the ship has been missing in...
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