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"The `touchy' mare gave so sudden a `prop,' accompanied by a desperate plunge, that he was thrown."
1861. T. McCombie, `Australian Sketches,' p. 10:
"The forest seemed alive with scouts `prospecting.'"
1864. J. Rogers, `New Rush,' pt. i. p. 18:
"Behold him, along with his partner set out, To prospect the unexplor'd ranges about."
1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `The Miner's Right,' p. 46:
"A promising place for prospecting. Yet nowhere did I see the shafts and heaps of rock or gravel which tell in a gold country of the hasty search for the precious metal."
1894. `The Argus,' March 10, p. 4, col. 6:
"The uses of the tin dish require explanation. It is for prospecting. That is to say, to wash the soil in which you think there is gold."
1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `The Miner's Right,' c. v. p. 54:
"The first prospect, the first pan of alluvial gold drift, was sent up to be tested."
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p. 17:
"I have obtained good dish prospects after crudely crus.h.i.+ng up the quartz."
See Prospect, v.
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p. 16:
"Prospecting in my division is on the increase."
Ibid. p. 13:
"The Egerton Company are doing a large amount of prospecting work."
1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `The Miner's Right,' c. v. p. 53:
"This, however, would be but half the size of the premier or prospecting claim."
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p. 19:
"The Government prospectors have also been very successful."
1891. W. Tilley, `Wild West of Tasmania,' p. 11:
"He incidentally mentioned his gold find to another prospector ... The last went out to the grounds and prospected, with the result that he discovered the first payable gold on the West Coast, for which he obtained a reward claim."
1847. J. D. Lang, `Cooksland,' p. 96:
"The species of fish that are commonest in the Bay (Moreton) are mullet, bream, puddinba (a native word corrupted by the colonists into pudding-ball) ... The puddinba is like a mullet in shape, but larger, and very fat; it is esteemed a great delicacy."
1896. `The Australasian,' Aug. 28, p. 407 col. 4:
"`Pudding-ball' is the name of a fish. It has nothing to do with pudding, nothing with any of the various meanings of ball.
The fish is not specially round. The aboriginal name was `pudden-ba.' Voila tout."
1896. `Otago Witness,' June 11, p. 51:
"Two pukaki [sic] flew across their path."
1855. Rev. R. Taylor, `Te Ika a Maui,' p. 115:
"Some of the trees were so alarmed that they held down their heads, and have never been able to hold them up since; amongst these were the ponga (a fern-tree) and the kareao (supple-jack), whose tender shoots are always bent."
1888. J. White, `Ancient History of Maori,' vol. iv.
p. 191:
"When Tara-ao left his pa and fled from the vengeance of Karewa, he and his people were hungry and cut down ponga, and cooked and ate them."
1888. J. Adams, `Transactions of New Zealand Inst.i.tute,'
vol. xxi. art. ii. p. 36:
"The size and beauty of the puriri, nikau, and ponga (Cyathea medullaris) are worthy of notice."
1892. E. S. Brookes, `Frontier Life,' p. 139:
"The Survey Department graded a zigzag track up the side to the top, fixing in punga steps, so that horses could climb up."