Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jul 9
Study Ties First Fleet to 220,000 Indigenous Australian Deaths in 1789 Smallpox Epidemic
Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jul 9

Study Ties First Fleet to 220,000 Indigenous Australian Deaths in 1789 Smallpox Epidemic

3 articles · Updated · The Conversation · Jul 9

Summary

  • A new Nature Human Behaviour study says the 1789 smallpox outbreak around Sydney most likely originated from the British First Fleet just 16 months after colonization began.
  • Transmission modelling found no plausible route for smallpox to travel from northern Australia to Sydney in time, undercutting the long-running theory that Makassan traders introduced it first.
  • The researchers say the disease may have spread along coastlines and major rivers for up to 21 years, reaching as far north as Townsville and as far west as Adelaide.
  • Using revised population estimates, the model puts the death toll at as many as 220,000 Aboriginal people; the exact trigger remains unclear, though stored variola matter for inoculation is one possible source.
  • The findings recast the epidemic as a continent-scale colonial catastrophe whose demographic and cultural damage to Indigenous communities lasted across generations.

Insights

Was the 1789 smallpox epidemic a tragic colonial accident or a covert biological weapon?
How does rewriting Australia’s first chapter with millions more people change its modern identity and future?