Skip to main content
The Australian Museum's bark canoe from the Whitsunday Island Group. The single internal frame …
Whitsunday Island Aboriginal Bark Canoe
The Australian Museum's bark canoe from the Whitsunday Island Group. The single internal frame …
The Australian Museum's bark canoe from the Whitsunday Island Group. The single internal frame can be seen toward the middle of the craft.
Photographer Stuart Humphries Australian Museum

Whitsunday Island Aboriginal Bark Canoe

Vessel numberHV000038
(not assigned)EO 13454
Datec 1900
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 2.58 m x 0.53 m (8.45 ft x 1.75 ft)
DescriptionThis Indigenous three-piece bark canoe is made in 3 panels with a bottom and two sides. The panels of bark are flat, and stitched to each other. The top edge of the side panels has a branch of timber lashed to the edge, and the joint between the panels also has a branch on the inside, held together with lashing or stitching. These branches stiffen the structure, and the joints between the three panels are caulked to make them watertight. There is one internal frame at the middle of the hull, and it is also made from a branch.

The panels all taper to a point at either end, and in profile the bottom panel curves upwards and the top edge curves downwards toward both ends. There is an interesting repair to a small split in one side panel, where it is pulled together with fibre lashing that is bound around a small reinforcing stick on the inside surface. It also appears to have had the inside surfaces treated with fire to remove loose material. There are no records showing when this craft was built, but it was collected around 1900 and so is assumed to come from that time as well.

The type was used in open waters between the islands in the Whitsunday Island Group off the northern Queensland coast. This use in potentially choppy water is helped by the relatively high freeboard of the side panels when compared with other Indigenous bark canoes. As well as being used for fishing activities, the craft enabled the Indigenous people to maintain inter-island contact.


SignificanceThe Whitsunday Island Bark Canoe is an Aboriginal bark canoe built around 1900 in Queensland. It is from the Australian Musuem collectionand is a rare example of this type of indigenous water craft. It is one of the few examples held in a collection and shows the three-panel construction of the type, which was only used in a small area of the Queensland Coast adjacent to the Whitsunday Island region and is not recorded anywhere else.