by damm, that's a quick reply Adam.
Sometimes too much information, I have trouble naming some of the more common plants let alone finding the rare and endangered. Must confess to a loose affiliation with one of the groups involved.
Michael Mansell, on the latest ABC 7-30 report , seeks to claim the area for the aboriginals and i think there was a push in the 1800's to give them the north east. George Robinson, who did the first documented Bay of Fires walk (several times) writes that you could tell where the whaling boats came ashore by the number of skeltons scattered about.
Robinson's aboriginal companions liked to climb Mt William and light fires so their women on the islands could see there was life in their home country still. There used to be a small plaque to Trugganini on the sand spit joining north and south Bruny. It seems to have gone now. Are there any memorials at all for those who lived here uninterruped for 10,000 years. (oops sorry, and continue to live here)
http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/ About 6 minutes on Thursday night
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/bookshow/stories/2009/2592798.htm Plomley's book of Robinon's journals