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Indigenous Australians

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Aborigines)
Picture of an Aboriginal man in the Albert Namatjira art gallery, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia

Indigenous Australians are the native people of Australia. They include the Aboriginal Australians as well as Torres Strait Islanders and are often known together as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.[1]

The first Indigenous Australians were hunter-gatherers, who migrated from Southeast Asia. Scientists do not know exactly when (or how) they arrived, but it was at least 60,000 years ago.[2][3][4][5]

Many Indigenous Australians suffered starting in 1788, when the first Europeans arrived. Many caught diseases from the Europeans (British and Irish people) and/or lost their hunting lands.[6]

Aboriginal man playing a didgeridoo

The first people of Australia were nomads who came to what is now Australia from Southeast Asia at least 60,000 years ago.[2] As hunter-gatherers, they used weapons like boomerangs, sticks, and spears to kill animals for food.

When the British came to Australia in 1788, they called the native people "aboriginals", meaning people who have lived there since the earliest times.

There are now about 650,000 Aboriginal people living in Australia.[7][8]

Aboriginal Australians believe in a process of creation called Dreamtime, when their animal, plant, and human ancestors created the world and everything in it.

There are many songs and stories about Dreamtime, which generations of Aboriginal people have passed down to their children.

Aboriginal Australians have their own type of art. Paintings of the people, spirits, and animals of Dreamtime cover sacred cliffs and rocks in tribal territories. Some of the pictures are made in red and yellow ochre and white clay. Others have been carved into the rocks. Many are thousands of years old.

Modern Aboriginal art is mostly based on old stories about Dreamtime.[9]

Boomerangs

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A typical boomerang shape

Boomerangs are one of a group of weapons known as "throwsticks". The typical boomerang is designed to be self-returning, but it msut be properly thrown.

Since boomerangs have been discovered in cultures with no connection with Australia such as in ancient Egypt,[10] they probably developed separately.

Modern computer-designed boomerangs may have three or four wings, instead of the traditional two.[11]

Land claims

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When the British came to live in Australia, they decided that the land was empty and that nobody "owned" the land in the way that Europeans used the word. That was called "terra nullius", Latin words for "empty land".[12]

In 1976, the Australian government gave Aboriginal people the right to use the land where their tribes were originally located. On 3 Jun, 1992, the High Court of Australia said that the idea of terra nullius was wrong, and the government brought in new laws to set up native title.[12]

Under the new laws, an Aboriginal person can claim land as Aboriginal land if they can prove that:[12]

  • They have always used that land.
  • The land has not been sold.
  • The land was never changed by government acts.

Population by region

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Region Population Percentage of region
 Australia 798,365 3.3%
 New Zealand 795[13]

Other websites

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References

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  1. Studies, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (12 July 2020). "Indigenous Australians: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people". aiatsis.gov.au.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Hesp, Patrick A. et al 1999. Aboriginal occupation on Rottnest Island, Western Australia, provisionally dated by aspartic acid racemisation assay of land snails to greater than 50 ka. Australian Archaeology, No 49 (1999)
  3. "Stone Pages Archaeo News: Australia colonized earlier than previously thought?". stonepages.com. 2003. Retrieved 28 March 2013.
  4. "Dreaming Online: Indigenous Australian Timeline". www.dreamtime.net.au. Archived from the original on 2009-02-06. Retrieved 2009-06-04.
  5. Clarkson, Chris; Jacobs, Zenobia; et al. (19 July 2017). "Human occupation of northern Australia by 65,000 years ago" (PDF). Nature. 547 (7663): 306–310. Bibcode:2017Natur.547..306C. doi:10.1038/nature22968. hdl:2440/107043. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 28726833. S2CID 205257212.
  6. "Indigenous and European Contact in Australia". Britannica Kids. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  7. Australia census: Five takeaways from a changing country". BBC News. 27 June 2017.
  8. Australian Bureau of Statistics Archived 2010-04-29 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Census data
  9. "10 Facts About Aboriginal Art | Kate Owen Gallery". www.kateowengallery.com.
  10. Valde-Nowak & others 1987. Upper Palaeolithic boomerang made of a mammoth tusk in south Poland. Nature 329: 436–438 (1 October 1987); doi:10.1038/329436a0 [1]
  11. Jones, Philip 1996. Boomerang: behind an Australian icon. Wakefield Press. ISBN 9781862543829
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 "Terra Nullius". Aboriginal Victoria. Visit Victoria. Archived from the original on 2010-03-18. Retrieved 2010-01-11.
  13. "2018 Census ethnic group summaries | Stats NZ".