The effects of smallpox are shown in this photograph taken at North Head Quarantine Station, Sydney. National Museum of Australia
The Spiritstone leads you to an Indigenous camp, where your friends welcome you.
You cannot believe the devastation you see all around. Sick people are lying on the ground, crying out in agony.
“The white colonists brought this on us!” shouts one terrified old woman.
Your friend, Jarran, describes the condition.
“The whitefellas call it ‘smallpox’. Our people have never experienced it before. It kills many of us. First comes a fever, then a headache and backache. You can be dead in just a few days. Seven out of ten of us who get it, die. In some places, a third of all Indigenous people are dead.”
Jarran continues, “With so many dying, we lose family, we lose community leaders.”
You wish Jarran well and head to the Port Jackson settler community. There you speak with white settlers this time.
A tall friendly blonde man called Paul Callahan is happy to talk to you.
“It is a shame what’s happening to the original people of Australia. We Europeans don’t get as sick from these diseases. Europeans have had these diseases for generations so we are more immune to them,” he says.
“But how did the disease outbreak begin?” you ask.
“I’ve heard all kinds of rumours,” says Paul, “did the disease come from the British settlers? French explorers? Or even fishermen working from off-shore islands in the north? And it’s not just smallpox. Other diseases will strike this land as well.”
He looks genuinely sad.
You retreat to your forest campsite. The Spiritstone glows orange, it has something to tell you.
“Before the settlers, there were about 700,000 Indigenous Australians. One hundred years later there were less than 100,000. The Europeans thought the Indigenous people were dying out. But they didn’t. In 2018 there are over 800,000 again. And the disease smallpox was wiped out for good in 1977.”
“Show your understanding by responding to this picture of a person with smallpox.”
Describe this image by writing in the boxes
The stone glows green.
“Warning! There are criminals flowing into the land. You must investigate!” Go to 4.