Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Aboriginal Victorians, the Aboriginal Australians of Victoria, Australia, occupied the land for tens of thousands of years prior to European settlement. [1] Aboriginal people have lived a semi-nomadic existence of fishing, hunting and gathering and associated activities for at least 40,000 years.
A Register of Massacre sites in Western Victoria 1803-1859, Aboriginal Studies Press, 1995 ISBN 0855752815. To a lesser degree information was correlated with the Aboriginal Australian Map published by AIATSIS, especially for border areas and east Victoria.. I have kept this in the svg format to allow corrections in derivative maps - Takver
The formally recognised traditional owners of the area on which Paschendale is sited are the Gunditjmara People [2] who are represented by the Gunditj Mirring Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation. [3]
The distinction between traditional custodians and traditional owners is made by some, but not all, First Nations Australians. [49] [50] On one hand, Yuwibara man Philip Kemp states that he would "prefer to be identified as a Traditional Custodian and not a Traditional Owner as I do not own the land but I care for the land."
Other involved agencies would be the Government of Victoria's Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, the Glenelg Hopkins Catchment Management Authority (all relating to the Budj Bim National Park area only), the Gunditj Mirring Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation (National Park, Budj Bim IPA, and Lake Condah Mission) and the ...
The Gunditjmara [a] or Gunditjamara, [b] also known as Dhauwurd Wurrung, are an Aboriginal Australian people of southwestern Victoria. They are the traditional owners of the areas now encompassing Warrnambool, Port Fairy, Woolsthorpe and Portland. Their land includes much of the Budj Bim heritage areas.
Victorian Aboriginal language territories. It was originally thought that areas of traditional Jardwadjali land showed signs of human occupation dating back no more than 5,000 years. Recent research has established a longer timeframe, from the late Pleistocene to the Holocene, where the record of habitation becomes much richer. [4]
Rosebrook is a locality in southwest Victoria, Australia. The locality is in the Shire of Moyne , 282 kilometres (175 mi) west of the state capital, Melbourne . At the 2016 census , Rosebrook had a population of 132.