Aboriginal use The archaeological record indicates that Kangaroo Island was inhabited by Aboriginal Australians as early as 16,110 years BP. European explorers visiting in the early 19th century found no evidence of human occupation as evident by lack of smoke from fires which was common along the Australian coastline at the time, overgrown vegetation that had not been managed by "firestick farming" and animals such as seals and kangaroos "appeared unused to human presence". Aboriginal sites have been identified by the
South Australian Museum and others on the Dudley Peninsula. As of 1999,
radiocarbon dating of material recovered via archaeological excavation from a site called Pigs Waterhole on the peninsula suggest aboriginal presence in the eastern end of Kangaroo Island as recently as 3,100 years BP.
European discovery and settlement on Kangaroo Island in 1803 Dudley Peninsula was first visited by European navigators in 1802 when the British navigator,
Matthew Flinders, explored its north coast during March 1802. After meeting Flinders at
Encounter Bay in April 1802, the
Baudin expedition visited the peninsula's north coast later in April 1802 and explored its south coast during January 1803. Formal settlement commenced in 1836 with a fleet under the control of the
South Australian Company arriving at what is now
Kingscote further west on Kangaroo Island. Some of the people who had been living on that part of Kangaroo Island prior to 1836 moved to the peninsula to avoid being within the jurisdiction of the South Australian Company and thereby making it "most prosperous part of the island and the scene of its first significant agricultural and pastoral development." The full extent of Kangaroo Island was gazetted on 13 August 1874 as the
cadastral division known as the
County of Carnarvon simultaneously with the creation of another cadastral division, the
Hundred of Dudley, which covers the full extent of what is now the Dudley Peninsula. The town of
Penneshaw was proclaimed on 12 January 1882. On 7 June 1888, the local government area of the
District Council of Dudley was established. This was subsequently merged in 1996 with the
District Council of Kingscote to create the
Kangaroo Island Council. ==Natural geography==