Page:Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia, Volume 1.djvu/495

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COASTS OF AUSTRALIA.
431

small sand flies which annoyed us very much in the evenings.

Besides the huts on the beach, which were merely strips of bark removed to form a shelter from the sun, there were others on top of the hill over the tents, of a larger and more substantial construction; no two, however, were built after the same fashion. One of the was thus erected:—Two walls of stones, piled one upon the other to the height of three feet, formed the two ends; and saplings were laid across to support a covering of bark or dried grass: the front, which faced the east, was not closed; but the back, which slanted from the roof to the ground, appeared to have been covered with bark like the roof.

Huts of the Natives at Careening Bay
Huts of the Natives at Careening Bay