lol.. another £20 million for the Muslims, from the tax payers of the United Kingdom. This time, in the name of English communication skills. I am pretty sure that 90% of that amount will end up with the local chapter of the Islamic State. When will Cameron realize that the British Muslims are not interested in learning English or following the British customs?
Yes we know and this is why when we brexit no more muslims will be able to enter and mosques closed down too many
When we brexit the only way a muslim will be able to enter is on a flying carpet
It's funny Australia is way way bigger than the UK but for some reason they can control the vast area's of there boarders but the UK being so small
can't do this?
Now if you ask me it's easier to control a small space than a big one would you all agree..But maybe us British are all going blind and find it hard to see..
DON'T EVER THREATEN US BRITISH..BAD IDEA..YES WE WOULD RATHER HAVE A WAR THAN BE BULLIED..
Dumbarton comment as he'll.
You know the difference between Australia and UK? You can't go to Australia on a fortune boat.
Of course they can control their borders!
The only way to go to Australia is by plane!!!!But go on, leave Europe, anyway UK was never really part of Europe since thatcher bitch. Leave Europe so we can stop spend money in keeping migrants in EUROPE. I don't even know why we still accept you, UK is against every policy that doesn't directly concerns it on a positive stance. What's the point of even keeping it in Europe? Can't you ask the rest of Europe if we want to keep UK? XD
France is enough of a dog of USA, we don't need the official dog that the UK is in Europe too
About 50,000 years ago, a small band of humans landed in northern Australia, arriving on a primitive boat or raft. It is likely that the journey was planned because enough men and women arrived to found a new population there. Perhaps guided by rivers, the group ventured deeper inland, where they found giant mammals, birds, and reptiles ripe for hunting, and no other humans to challenge them. This intrepid group had stumbled upon a new continent, and they had it all to themselves.
The ocean crossing from Asia to Australia is one of humanity’s great early achievements, but it’s one that is shrouded in mystery. Why modern humans made the journey, and when, are still open questions that scientists are keen to answer because they could hold the key to understanding when our ancestors first left Africa and whether they did so in one wave or in a staggered exodus spread out over millennia.
Archaeological evidence reveals that modern humans had spread into Southeast Asia from Africa by about 60,000 years ago, and that they were in Australia by about 50,000 years ago. The earliest known evidence of human occupation in Australia is a rock shelter in the Northern Territory that is about 55,000 years old, while the oldest human fossils ever discovered in Australia are about 10,000 years younger. Spencer Wells, a geneticist and a National Geographic explorer-in-residence, has speculated that the first Australians landed in northern Australia and Papua New Guinea—then part of the same landmass—and gradually moved inland by following the river systems of Queensland and southern Australia.
The First Explorers?
Anthropologists have long debated whether modern humans left Africa only once and then radiated around the globe, or if there were multiple journeys out of the continent. Previously, the most widely accepted theory was that all modern humans derive from a single out-of-Africa migration wave into Europe, Asia, and Australia. According to this model, the first Australians branched off from an Asian population that had already separated from the ancestors of Europeans.
But in 2011, this conventional wisdom was challenged by a new discovery. Using modern gene sequencing techniques, researchers sampled the DNA from a lock of hair that a young Aboriginal man had donated to a British anthropologist in 1923. When DNA in the hair was compared with the genomes of people living in Asia, Europe, and Africa, scientists discovered that Aboriginal Australians are more closely related to Africans than they are to modern Asians and Europeans.
This suggests humans migrated into Eastern Asia in multiple waves and that today’s Aboriginal Australians are descended from an early wave that left Africa about 70,000 years ago, before the ancestors of Asians and Europeans. If confirmed, the finding means that present-day Aboriginal Australians are the oldest population of humans living outside of Africa.
https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/migration-to-australia/OK let's correct myself as you don't want to understand what everyone will understand...
The most common way to go to Australia is by plane, mainly because trying to go to Australia by boat is incredibly risky! The distance has nothing in comparison to what separates France from UK or magreb to France.