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Junior School: Where Do I Belong?

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Where Do I Belong?

Interesting Information about Aboriginal People

Arts and Crafts

The Aboriginal people of Australia created many forms of art. The most enduring artworks are the paintings and engravings on the walls of caves and rock shelters.  Aboriginal performance art included storytelling, dancing, and singing.

Painting: To make paint, Aboriginal people crushed and ground red, yellow, black, and white pigments of varying shades and mixed them with water. Fingers, twigs, pieces of fiber, chewed stick ends, feathers, and human hair served as brushes.

Aboriginal rock art is one of the oldest continuous art traditions in the world, dating back at least 40,000 years. Aborigines might have used the ocher to make paint for rock paintings, or to paint tools or their own bodies.

Sculpture: Aboriginal people in northeastern Arnhem Land made carved and painted human figures. In central Australia, Aboriginal people made a large variety of sacred objects of wood and stone. They used stone tools for cutting into stone or wood and for carving wooden objects.

Storytelling among the Aboriginal people sometimes drew on the Aborigines’ daily experiences. But more often, storytelling repeated sacred stories about the Dreamings who created the world. These stories described the creation of the country and all the living things, including people.

Dance was usually associated with Dreaming stories. The main musical instruments in North Australia were a Didgeridoo (a pipe made of straight, hollowed-out pieces of wood) and Clapsticks (two carved sticks struck rhythmically). Aboriginal musicians throughout Australia used Clapsticks.

Singing was an important part of Aboriginal life. The Aboriginal people had women’s songs and men’s songs, secret songs, and public songs. Some songs could only be sung during ceremonies. Others were for good luck in hunting, to make a child grow strong, to make rain, or to make someone fall in love. Songs for sorrow and grief that were sung at funerals. Other songs were little poems that expressed the composer’s thoughts or feelings at a particular time. People owned the songs they created, and songs could be traded.

Ancient Australia

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During the Pleistocene period, sea levels were much lower than they are today. This would have made migration from Asia to Australia much easier than it is now. However several long sea crossings would still have had to be made. The land bridge between Australia and New Guinea was blocked by rising sea levels about 8,000 years ago.

The indigenous people of Australia and New Guinean's are closely related by DNA. DNA evidence shows that the Australian Aborigines belong to the modern humans who left Africa between 50,000 and 70,000 years ago.

Research also shows that the Australian Aborigines were part of a group that left Africa 24,000 years before the groups that settled in Europe and Asia. This makes them one of the oldest indigenous peoples outside Africa. The DNA also shows that most migration to Australia stopped about 50,000 years ago, and the people here developed in isolation to the rest of the world.

The Australian Aboriginal population is one of the oldest continuous cultures in the world.

See link below for information on Mungo Mana and  Mungo Lady.

 

Australia Aboriginal Culture 011

Australia Aboriginal Culture 016 (5494782826)

 

Some Ancient Aboriginal Tools and Paintings

Aboriginal Australian Culture

Aboriginal Australian Culture

Two ancient tools comprised of a painted stone head afixed to a wooden handle rest alongside three stone axe-head artefacts.

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