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Wallabies are widely distributed across Australia, particularly in more remote, heavily timbered, or rugged areas, less so on the great semi-arid plains that are better suited to the larger, leaner, and more fleet-footed kangaroos. They also can be found at the island of New Guinea.[4]
In 1526-27 the Portuguese explorer Jorge de Meneses saw the western tip of New Guinea and named it ilhas dos Papuas. In 1528 Spanish navigator Álvaro de Saavedra also recorded its sighting when trying to return from Tidore to New Spain. In 1545 the Spaniard Íñigo Ortíz de Retes sailed along the north coast of New Guinea as far as the Mamberamo River near which he landed on 20 June, naming the island 'Nueva Guinea'.[36] The first map showing the whole island (as an island) was published in 1600 and shows it as 'Nova Guinea'.
muzzleflash
I'm going with this, location even matches up:
Wallabies are widely distributed across Australia, particularly in more remote, heavily timbered, or rugged areas, less so on the great semi-arid plains that are better suited to the larger, leaner, and more fleet-footed kangaroos. They also can be found at the island of New Guinea.[4]
In 1526-27 the Portuguese explorer Jorge de Meneses saw the western tip of New Guinea and named it ilhas dos Papuas
Cinrad
Actually I am thinking that the native on the book looks more like a Melanesian (New Guinean) than an Australian Aboriginal. The ones up north were much more slender and taller and the guy in the book is short and stocky, and the face looks more like a Melanesian. Wallabies can be found in New Guinea as you mentioned, so I too am going with NG.