Explorer Flinders found under London station

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightArt Gallery of South AustraliaImage caption Captain Matthew Flinders is credited with naming Australia
The remains of explorer Captain Matthew Flinders have been identified by archaeologists working on the HS2 project in a London
burial ground.Captain Flinders led the first circumnavigation of Australia and is credited with naming the country.Some 61,000 skeletons
will be removed from St James's Gardens, where the station for the HS2 rail route will be built near London Euston station.A recently
discovered coffin showed the captain was buried on 23 July 1814
The dig began in October - one of 60 archaeological sites between London and Birmingham being explored prior to the construction of the
Euston station was expanded in the 19th Century but it was unclear whether his body or others would be able to be identified.Image
copyrightHS2Image caption Archaeologists were able to identify the remains of the explorer by a lead plate placed on top
of his coffin The discovery so early in the dig has thrilled archaeologists who were not confident they would find Captain
Flinders among the 40,000 people interred there, HS2 said.They were able to identify his remains by the lead breast plate placed on top of
his coffin.Image copyrightHS2Image caption Some 61,000 burials took place at St James's Gardens between 1788 and 1853,
beside what is now London Euston station Captain Flinders, who was from Lincolnshire, made several significant journeys,
notably as commander of HMS Investigator
In the ship he became the first known person to navigate around the entire coast of Australia, confirming it as a continent.He is also
credited with giving Australia its name - although he was not the first to use the term, his work popularised its use.The headstone marking
his final resting place was removed following the expansion of Euston Station into part of the burial ground in the 1840s, and it was
thought his remains had been lost.Image copyrightHS2/MOLA Headland InfrastructureImage caption Over 200 archaeologists
and specialists are working at the site beside Euston Station At the bicentenary of this death, a statue was unveiled by the
Duke of Cambridge at Australia House and later installed at Euston Station.Helen Wass, HS2 head of heritage, said: "The discovery is an
incredible opportunity for us to learn more about the life and remarkable achievements of this British navigator, hydrographer and
scientist."Given the number of human remains at St James's , we weren't confident that we were going to find him."We'll now be able to
study his skeleton to see whether life at sea left its mark and what more we can learn about him."Captain Flinders will be reinterred with
the buried population of St James's Gardens at a location to be announced, HS2 said.Bill "the Black Terror" Richmond, a slave born in New
York who became a free Londoner and a celebrated bare-knuckle boxer who was favoured by King George IV and taught Lord Byron to sparLord
George Gordon, a political and religious activist famous for his part in the anti-Catholic "Gordon Riots" of 1780James Christie, a British
naval officer who became a leading auctioneer and founded Christie's auction house in 1766