Indigenous people have occupied the area that became the Tiwi Islands for at least 40,000 years. It is said that the first European to sight the island was
Abel Tasman in 1644. Explorer
Phillip Parker King (son of governor of
New South Wales Philip Gidley King) named it for
Robert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville, first
Lord of the Admiralty, who is also commemorated by the much larger
Melville Island in the
Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Shortly after this, the British made the first attempt to settle Australia's north coast, at the short-lived
Fort Dundas on Melville Island. The settlement lasted from 1824 to 1828. In an 1853 book chapter on Melville Island,
George Windsor Earl theorised that the island had been a source of slaves for
Portuguese Timor and had been regularly raided by Portuguese slave traders, citing anecdotal evidence from King and Fort Dundas commandant John Campbell. Earl's theory has been repeated and expanded by a number of subsequent writers, sometimes in support of the unorthodox
theory of the Portuguese discovery of Australia. However, no direct evidence for these practices exists in Portuguese sources or in Tiwi oral tradition. There was a Catholic mission on the island, on which
Nova Peris' mother was raised after being taken from her mother. During
World War II the small
Snake Bay Patrol manned by local
Tiwi people was established as part of the military forces deployed to protect the island against any Japanese landings. ==Geography and climate==