In response to increasing demand to access historical statistics on the Web, the Australian Bureau of Statistics has recently digitised an important compendium of Australian and New Zealand colonial data, A Statistical account of the seven colonies of Australasia. We are progressively loading this material to the ABS Website.

A Statistical account of the seven colonies of Australasia (and its later title, Statistical account of Australia and New Zealand) was compiled between 1890 and 1904 by the New South Wales Statistician, Timothy A. Coghlan. The eleven volumes bring together statistics for each of the colonies of Australia and New Zealand and are complemented by analysis and commentary. The publication also includes chapters on political divisions, areas and boundaries, climate, parliaments and defence much like in the current Year Book Australia.

Coghlan’s expressed aim, as stated in the Preface to the first volume, was to ‘exhibit at a glance the position held by each Colony individually, and by the country as a whole, with regard to all matters connected with its moral and material welfare’.

The scanning process allows full-text searching capability once downloaded.

This title adds to a range of historical data which ABS has been progressively adding to our Website, including Demography bulletin which includes detailed population and vital statistics data for the period 1900 – 1971 and Labour reports, covering the period 1911 – 1997. See the full list of titles already available, as well as those which will be available later in the year.

The National Library of Australia has announced its new “Single Business Discovery Service” in Beta mode. Despite the wordy name this is a single easy access point to a variety of Australian catalogues, directories and collections. For this initial version there are a range of data sources including: the Australian National Bibliographic Database, Australian Newspapers, Picture Australia, the ARROW Discovery Service, and Pandora. The new service also provides the discovery interface for the People Australia initiative and some external sources of data such as OAIster, Open Library, the Hathi Trust, the Internet Archive and the Library of Congress tables of contents, publishers’ descriptions and sample book chapters.
This is set to be really useful, so if you have any suggestions or comments please make them – so iwe get the best service possible!

To have a look, a play, and to use it – http://sbdsproto.nla.gov.au/

Find out about Australian history and culture in this collection of stories – everything from “Aboriginal Trackers” to “Zoos in Australia”, via “Lighthouse Design”. The articles are brief, but there are good links to other resources and more in depth treatments.
http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/stories/

The Natural History Museum has digitised three collections which have images from the First Fleet. The collection contains 629 drawings and water-colours in total. They are arranged under four collections.
Natural History
Ethnography
Topography
History
http://www.nhm.ac.uk/jdsml/nature-online/first-fleet/index.dsml

The Internet Archive announced early in February that it was now hosting travel films from Watson Kintner.

Watson Kintner traveled to over 30 countries in his lifetime (1890-1979) and took a 16mm camera with him. His films demonstrate his desire to get right into the country and depict a variety of locations (including Australia and Asia), customs and life. They have been collected and preserved by the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology who has archived the collection at Internet Archive.

You can view over 400 of his films at archive.org.