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         Aborigines Australia:     more books (100)
  1. The Aborigines of Western Australia by Albert F. Calvert, 2008-02-24
  2. Tradition and Transformation: A Study of Aborigines in the Groote Eylandt Area, Northern Australia (Australian Aboriginal Studies, 53)
  3. Down among the wild men: The narrative journal of fifteen years pursuing the old stone age Aborigines of Australia's Western Desert by John Greenway, 1973
  4. Race Relations in Australia - the Aborigines by G. Fay Gale, Alison Brookman, 1975-12-31
  5. Race politics in Australia: Aborigines, politics, and law by Colin Martin Tatz, 1979
  6. Arguments About Aborigines: Australia and the Evolution of Social Anthropology. (book reviews): An article from: Oceania by John Morton, 1997-06-01
  7. Teacher's Guide Australia and the Aborigines (Communities at Home and Abroad)
  8. Desert People: A Study of the Walbiri Aborigines of Central Australia by M. I. Meggitt, 1965-06
  9. White Flour, White Power: From Rations to Citizenship in Central Australia by Tim Rowse, 2002-07-11
  10. AROUND AUSTRALIA PROGRAM: THE AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINES by A. P. Elkin, 1966
  11. The Aborigines of south-eastern Australia as they were by Aldo Massola, 1971
  12. The Australian Aborigines (The Natural History Library) by A.P. Elkin, 1964
  13. A Descriptive Vocabulary Of The Language In Common Use Amongst The Aborigines Of Western Australia by George Fletcher Moore, 2007-07-25
  14. Aborigines and change: Australia in the '70s (Social anthropology series)

41. The Aborigines - Australia's Native People
The aborigines australia s native people.
http://www.en.original-people.eu.org/aborigines.shtml
To Startpage In Swedish Search Engines Search this sajt ... Contact E-mail
The Aborigines - Australia's native people Relaxing travel
Genealogy

Research

Swedish
...
Narrative
The word Aborigine is a concatenation of the Latin words ab (from) and origine (beginning) meaning the Aborigines were in Australia from the beginning or native . It is the second word origine, the white people used for the natives after calling them Indians. Initially the word aborigine, probably involved some kind of disdain. Recent findings in Kakadu National park show that there might have been human life in Australia for up to 60.000 years, while referring to former estimations the aborigines came overland from New Guinea about 40.000 years ago.
Aboriginal land rights
Before the coming of the white man, major factors in the life of the Aboriginal were the community and the land in which they dwelt. Nowadays the dominant factor in the life of the Aboriginal is the influence of European culture. The issue of Aboriginal Land Rights has become a major one over the past few years and has met with varying degrees of support or opposition. The issue is extremely complex and emotive. While there does not appear to be any clear-cut solution to the problem, the increasing awareness within wide spectrum's of Australian society may bring the issue closer to a solution. It is interesting to note that the problem of Land Rights had already been raised well over a century ago but the overall attitude toward the Aboriginal people at that time greatly hindered any real support for its cause.

42. Dreaming Online: Indigenous Australian Timeline
archaeological evidence that Aboriginal people have been living for some time insouth eastern australia eg. Lake Mungo. 31 000 years ago. aborigines living at
http://www.dreamtime.net.au/indigenous/timeline.cfm
@import url("../stylesheets/advanced.css");
Indigenous Australia
  • Home About Indigenous Australia Search the site:
    Timeline - Pre-Contact
    Rainbow Serpent by Barney Daniels Tgungurrayi, Luritja people, Haasts Bluff, Alice Springs, Northern Territory. Acquired in 1988. This acrylic painting on linen shows Dreamtime hunters (U-shapes) searching for eggs of the rainbow serpent, 'Wanampi', which are hidden in underground caverns. Wanampi formed different features in the landscape around Papunya in the Northern Territory. These features are represented by the different colours in the background of the painting.
    65 000 years ago
    There is still uncertainty surrounding the exact timing of the initial human colonisation of Australia, and both the timing and nature of megafaunal extinctions.
    40 000 years ago
    Clear archaeological evidence that Aboriginal people have been living for some time in south eastern Australia eg. Lake Mungo.
    31 000 years ago
    Aborigines living at the Keilor site in Victoria.

43. Aboriginal Australia: History, Culture, And Conflict
(SourceAP). Who Are aborigines? aborigines are australia s indigenous people.Recent government tales. Books About aborigines and australia. The
http://www.factmonster.com/spot/aboriginal1.html
Aboriginal Australia
History and culture of Australia's indigenous peoples
by Ricco Villanueva Siasoco
Djakapurra Munyarryun plays the didgeridoo in the "Sea of Hands" display in Sydney in 1998. The display was in support of native title and reconciliation of Australian aboriginals. (Source:AP) Who Are Aborigines?
Aborigines
are Australia's indigenous people. Recent government statistics counted approximately 400,000 aboriginal people, or about 2% of Australia's total population. Australian Aborigines migrated from somewhere in Asia "The Dreamtime"
Aboriginal spirituality entails a close relationship between humans and the land. Aborigines call the beginning of the world the "Dreaming," or "Dreamtime." In the "Dreamtime," aboriginal "Ancestors" rose from below the earth to form various parts of nature including animal species , bodies of water, and the sky.
The name "aborigine" derives from the Latin, meaning "original inhabitants." There are approx. 400,000 aborigines living in Australia.
Unlike other religions, however, aboriginal belief does not place the human species apart from or on a higher level than nature. Aborigines believe some of the Ancestors metamorphosed into nature (as in rock formations or rivers), where they remain spiritually alive.
Storytelling, Art, and the Didgeridoo

44. European Network For Indigenous Australian Rights: Australia’s Human Rights Rec
info for aborigines on European campaigning. ENIAR Bulletin Board. You can makea difference There is a hidden health emergency in australia that demands our
http://www.eniar.org/hr.html
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click below for more about these issues
  • native title
  • Aboriginal history and heritage
  • Aboriginal identity and culture
  • australia's human rights record ... issues
    Protest outside the Northern Territory Tourism office in Sydney against Mandatory Sentencing. 2000
    Protest by Aboriginal people in Sydney, 1938
    Aboriginal Tent Embassy outside Parliament House, Canberra 1972 Australia has been found guilty by a United Nations body of practising racial discrimination against its own citizens. Australia has agreed to be bound by all major international human rights Conventions and has taken a high profile on promoting human rights internationally - especially in opposing apartheid in South Africa. But both national and international bodies are now saying that Australia is itself guilty of fundamental human rights breaches in its treatment of its indigenous citizens. The UN Committee on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) exists to monitor and end racial discrimination. It considers reports by Governments on racial discrimination in their countries and follows up urgent cases of racial discrimination brought to its notice.
  • 45. AGPix.com
    Photographers Specializing in aborigines (australia) The following photographershave listed this term in their stocklist as a specialty.
    http://www.agpix.com/search_index.php?index_id=10056

    46. A Guide To Indigenous Issues In Australia
    directive Indigenous Issues In australia. Legislation ATSIC). australianInstitute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. Council
    http://www.australianpolitics.com/issues/aborigines/aborigines.shtml

    47. Indigenous. ABC News Online
    The Geraldton Streetwork Aboriginal Corporation in Western australia s midwesthopes to see its crisis Local aborigines to work at new Hunter coal mine.
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/indigenous/default.htm
    News Home Top Stories Just In World ... Help/Site Map Programs RADIO AM Back. Briefing Business Report Corresp. Report Go Asia Pacific NewsRadio PM Sunday Profile World Today TV 7.30 Report Asia Pacific Focus Aust. Story Bus. Breakfast Foreign Corresp. Four Corners Inside Business Insiders Landline Lateline Stateline
    Sunday, June 6, 2004. Sunday, June 6, 2004. 13:52 AEST
    Stolen children come home, 60 years on
    A memorial plaque has been laid at the remote Northern Territory community of Phillip Creek, 40 kilometres north of Tennant Creek, at the site where 16 part-Aboriginal children were taken from their families in 1946. FULL STORY Sunday, June 6, 2004. 09:12 AEST
    Lawyer warns film-makers over ignoring Indigenous concerns
    A Northern Territory-based author says Darwin needs to recognise the unique cultural concerns of Indigenous people while it attempts to become a creativity centre. FULL STORY Saturday, June 5, 2004. Saturday, June 5, 2004. 09:55 AEST
    Qld signs historic land use agreement
    Australia's first Indigenous land use agreement over an entire township is being marked today. FULL STORY Saturday, June 5, 2004. 06:31 AEST

    48. Safe Houses Needed For Itinerant Aborigines: Mission Australia. 12/05/2004. ABC
    Last Update Wednesday, May 12, 2004. 748am (AEST). Safe houses neededfor itinerant aborigines Mission australia. A member of Darwin s
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s1106355.htm
    @import url(/news/stylesheets/news2.css); News Home Top Stories Just In World ... Help/Site Map Programs RADIO AM Back. Briefing Business Report Corresp. Report Go Asia Pacific NewsRadio PM Sunday Profile World Today TV 7.30 Report Asia Pacific Focus Aust. Story Foreign Corresp. Four Corners Inside Business Insiders Landline Lateline Stateline
    Print Email Last Update: Wednesday, May 12, 2004. 7:48am (AEST)
    Safe houses needed for itinerant Aborigines: Mission Australia
    A member of Darwin's Indigenous community patrol says safe houses need to be provided for itinerant people who can not fly home to their own communities. Warren Owens from the Mission Australia patrol says the safe houses could be modelled on the Maori longhouse system in New Zealand. He says some itinerants sleep rough in Darwin as they can not return home because they have been barred. "If they know there is somewhere safe, you'll get most of these people off the streets, because they're just like other people," he said. "If they have a venue to go to, a safe house, a safe area as was brought up, there really isn't many safe areas for these people to have a drink." Print Email
    ABC Top Stories

    49. Australia’s Aborigines … Did They See Dinosaurs?
    australia’s aborigines Did they see dinosaurs? by Rebecca Driver23 April 2001. First published in Creation Ex Nihilo 21(1)24
    http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/Magazines/docs/v21n1_aboriginals_dinos
    UPHOLDING THE AUTHORITY OF THE BIBLE FROM THE VERY FIRST VERSE SEARCH Contact Us Home Store Events ... Contact us Refuting Compromise A biblical and scientific refutation of ‘Progressive Creationism’ (billions of years). Order your copy today. Bookstore and resource center Creation Magazine Subscribe Renew Search Archives: Upcoming Events Bridgwater, Somerset, United Kingdom Handsworth, Birmingham, United Kingdom Columbus, Ohio, United States Kununurra, WA, Australia ... Printer-friendly version
    Did they see dinosaurs?

    by Rebecca Driver
    23 April 2001 First published in:
    Creation Ex Nihilo
    SUBSCRIBE to the full-color
    CREATION family magazine TODAY! The locals appear familiar with this creature, which they readily identify from drawings of fossil reconstructions as being like one of the dinosaurs. Few realise, however, that similar accounts occur in other parts of the world. Australian Aborigines have stories of encounters with huge, sometimes frightening monsters which range from what sound like dinosaurs to giant marsupials, also believed to have long become extinct.
    The Aboriginal people
    Dreamtime monsters
    Such oral traditions tend not to last more than a few hundred years without being distorted out of recognition.

    50. Australia’s Aborigines ... Did They See Dinosaurs?
    Creation Archive Volume 21 Issue 1 australia’s aborigines did theysee dinosaurs? australia’s aborigines did they see dinosaurs?
    http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v21/i1/aborigines.asp
    UPHOLDING THE AUTHORITY OF THE BIBLE FROM THE VERY FIRST VERSE SEARCH Contact Us Home Store Events ... Volume 21 Issue 1 First published:
    Creation
    December 1998 Browse this issue Subscribe to Creation Magazine
    by Rebecca Driver The locals appear familiar with this creature, which they readily identify from drawings of fossil reconstructions as being like one of the dinosaurs. Few realize, however, that similar accounts occur in other parts of the world. Australian Aborigines have stories of encounters with huge, sometimes frightening monsters which range from what sound like dinosaurs to giant marsupials, also believed to have long become extinct.
    The Aboriginal people
    Dreamtime monsters
    Such oral traditions tend not to last more than a few hundred years without being distorted out of recognition. This would suggest that some of these animals may have still been living in Australia some two to three hundred years ago, or even more recently. Such a conclusion may surprise many, but it would explain why documented encounters with similar monsters post-date the time of European settlement.

    51. Visiting AUSTRALIA!
    Aussie phrases!!!!! australia s aborigines australia s first inhabitantsand some history of australia is included! Marsupials
    http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/pages/listaustraliga.html
    Visiting AUSTRALIA!
    An Internet Hotlist on Australia created by Gail Schlicht
    Greenfield Middle School in Greenfield, Wisconsin
    Introduction Fast Facts, Flags and Maps ... Pictures and Postcards from Australia!
    Introduction
    Wouldn't it be AWESOME to visit Australia? Let's tour the LAND DOWN UNDER!!!!!! Be sure to check out the fast facts, attractions and plants and animals of Australia!!! And the Aborigines. You won't want to miss a thing!!!! G' Day, Mate! Let's hop to Australia. By the way, why is Australia called the 'LAND DOWN UNDER'?
    The Internet Resources

    52. Aborigines And Aboriginal Culture
    Search. australia / New Zealand for Visitors, aborigines and Aboriginal CultureGuide picks. australia s indigenous people, their life, their culture.
    http://goaustralia.about.com/cs/aboriginalculture/
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Travel Australia / New Zealand for Visitors Culture and the Arts Aboriginal Culture Home Essentials Strine and Aussie Slang Australia / NZ in Pictures ... Sydney Theatre Guide zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Discover Australia Discover New Zealand Adventure and Sports Culture and the Arts ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Australia / New Zealand for Visitors newsletter. Search Australia / New Zealand for Visitors
    Aborigines and Aboriginal Culture
    Australia's indigenous people, their life, their culture
    Alphabetical
    Recent Up a category Aboriginal Art Where to find and view Aboriginal art in Sydney. A sampling of uniquely Australian indigenous art. Aboriginal Australia's Olympic Heroes Cathy Freeman and Nova Peris-Kneebone are Aboriginal Australia's top Olympic heroes in the women's track events. Bark Paintings at Tandanya Part of the indigenous multi-arts displays at Tandanya, the National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, in Adelaide. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) Australia's main indigenous agency. The ATSIC site is an important international resource for information on indigenous programs, activities and issues.

    53. BBC News | ASIA-PACIFIC | Voices Against Racism: Australia's Aborigines
    Wednesday, 5 September, 2001, 0023 GMT 0123 UK Voices against racismAustralia s aborigines. aborigines want compensation for
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1525825.stm
    CATEGORIES TV RADIO COMMUNICATE ... INDEX SEARCH You are in: World: Asia-Pacific Front Page World ... AudioVideo
    SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobiles/PDAs Feedback ... Low Graphics Wednesday, 5 September, 2001, 00:23 GMT 01:23 UK Voices against racism: Australia's Aborigines
    Aborigines want compensation for past injustices
    By the BBC's Elizabeth Blunt in Durban Amid the diplomatic posturing and the haggling over language at the World Conference against Racism it is easy to lose sight of the reality of racism. Each day during the meeting in South Africa some of those who have suffered discrimination have been telling their personal stories. Among them is Monica Morgan, from the Aboriginal Yorta Yorta people of south-eastern Australia. There were 20,000 Yorta Yorta people in that region before the British - what Monica Morgan calls the "first boat people" - came in 1788. By the end of the 19th century, fewer than 100 were left. Trauma Now their population has recovered to 4,000, but she told the conference how the survivors had been traumatised by the collective effects of two centuries of racism.
    Monica Morgan: Aborigines were "brainwashed" and "violated"
    Her own generation has been marked by the removal of Aboriginal children from their families, the so-called "stolen generation".

    54. Australian Aborigines. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
    Organization in Aboriginal australia (1979); G. Blainey, Triumph of the Nomads AHistory of Aboriginal australia (1982); S. Bennett, aborigines and Political
    http://www.bartleby.com/65/au/Australab.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Australian aborigines The aborigines have an intricate classification system that defines kinship relations and regulates marriages. The Kariera, for example, are divided into hordes, or local groups of about 30 people, which are divided into four classes, or sections. Membership in a section determines ritual and territorial claims. In half of the hordes the men are divided among the Karimera and Burung sections; in the other half they are divided among the Palyeri and Banaka sections. These sections are exogamous, and rules of

    55. Pictures Of Australia - Aborigines
    aborigines australia s natives.
    http://www.australienbilder.de/e-abpeop.htm
    Aborigines - Australia's natives
    Aboriginal art

    Australia's history

    The word Aborigine is a concatenation of the Latin words ab (from) and origine (beginning) meaning being there from the beginning or native . It is the second word the white people used for the natives after calling them Indians . Initially the word aborigine probably involved some kind of disdain. Recent findings in Kakadu Nationalpark show that there might have been human life in Australia for up to 60.000 years , while referring to former estimations the aborigines came overland from New Guinea about 40.000 years ago.
    The aborigines' life was ruled by their relation to their land. In their point of view their land didn't mean possessing land but was just a certain region through which the members of a clan had wandered within several years. Everything the people needed for living was given to them by their land. So getting food was one of the main tasks during the day. While men kept traditions and went hunting, women collected small animals, fruits and parts of plants that could be used for food, tools or clothes. Women as well prepared meals. So the aborigines were nomads, several small groups who met from time to time in order to maintain traditions and keep cultural and social heritage. These traditional values are often called dreamtime and are stored in dreamtime stories. A lot of songs and dances base on these stories and were used to transfer the knowledge and tradition to the following generations. In addition a lot of dreamtime stories were expressed in paint art like rock paintings or bark paintings.

    56. Australian Aborigine
    australian Aborigine. aborigines in northern australia were often forced towork and the term slavery has been used in regard to their employment.
    http://www.fact-index.com/a/au/australian_aborigine.html
    Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
    Australian Aborigine
    Australian Aborigines are the indigenous peoples of Australia . Their ancestors probably arrived in Australia just over 50,000 years ago, although the date remains uncertain. Some researchers put the date of arrival at close to 100,000 years ago, but the case for very early occupation presently rests on a single archeological site of uncertain date. At the time of first contact with the European colonists in the late 18th century , most Aboriginals were hunter-gatherers with a complex oral culture and spiritual values based upon reverence for the land and a belief in the Dreamtime . The Dreamtime is at once the ancient time of creation and the present day reality of dreaming. (Also see Aboriginal mythology There were a great many different Aboriginal groups, each with their own individual culture, belief structure, and language (approximately 200 different languages at the time of European contact). These cultures overlapped to a greater or lesser extent, and evolved over time. Lifestyles varied a great deal, and the sterotyped image of a proud and naked hunter standing one-legged in the red sand of the central Australian desert cannot be applied across the board. In present-day Victoria , for example, there were two separate communities with an economy based on fish-farming in complex and extensive irrigated pond systems (one on the Murray River in the state's north, the other in the south-west near Hamilton), and trade with other groups from as far away as the

    57. Adherents.com
    (1992); pg. 395. Anthropologists estimate that 300,000 aborigines lived in australiabefore 1770. 14. Today there are about 270,000 aborigines in australia.
    http://www.adherents.com/Na/Na_47.html
    Adherents.com
    42,669 adherent statistic citations : membership and geography data for 4,000+ religions, churches, tribes, etc. Index back to attendance - weekly, USA - women
    attendance - weekly, continued...
    Group Where Number
    of
    Adherents % of
    total
    pop. Number
    of
    congreg./
    churches/
    units Number
    of
    countries Year Source Quote/ Notes attendance - weekly USA - women Wuthnow, Robert. The Restructuring of American Religion: Society and Faith Since World War II , Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press (1988); pg. 226. "...American women... Half attend religious services at least once every week and more than two-thirds attend at least once a month. " attendance - weekly Venezuela *LINK* Swanbrow, Diane. University of Michigan, Dec. 1997. "Church Attendance Figures " web page; "Sociology at Hewitt " site, Hewitt School, Norfolk, UK Table: "Percentage of Adult Population that Attends Church at Least Once a Week "; Source: Based on latest available data from the... 1995-1997 World Values surveys. attendance - weekly Venezuela *LINK* web site: "The University of Michigan News and Information Services "; web page: "Study identifies worldwide rates of religiosity, church attendance " (viewed 17 April 1999). "News Release: December 10, 1997 " By Diane Swanbrow.

    58. Adherents.com - Religious Groups In Literature
    partymeant empty land. It referred tot he old fiction that australia was unoccupiedwhen Captain Cook planted the flag here, that the aborigines had no
    http://www.adherents.com/lit/Na_28.html
    Adherents.com: Religious Groups in Literature
    33,992 citations from literature (mostly science fiction and fantasy) referring to real churches, religious groups, tribes, etc. [This database is for literary research only . It is not intended as a source of information about religion.] Index back to Atlantean, world
    Atlantean, continued...
    Group Where Year Source Quote/
    Notes Atlantean world -1400 B.C.E. Anderson, Poul. The Dancer from Atlantis . Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday (1971); pg. 179. "'We have taken your Atlantean and Knossian friends back to Crete..' " Atlantean world -1400 B.C.E. Anderson, Poul. The Dancer from Atlantis . Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday (1971); pg. 87. "If you reconstructed the single original island, you got a picture oddly suggestive of the capital of Atlantis as described by Plato; and ancient walls were known to be buried under the lava and cinders. That settlement might be better preserved than Pompeii, what parts had not vanished in the catastrophe. To be sure, Plato could simply have been embellishing his discourses in the Timaios and the Kritias with a fiction. He had put his lost continent in midocean, impossibly big and impossibly far back if it was to have fought Athens. Yet there was some reason to believe he drew on a tradition, that half-memory of the Minoan empire which flickered through classical legend. " [Many refs. to Atlantis throughout novel, as should be obvious from the novel's title.]

    59. Australian Aborigine
    males. There are about 228,000 aborigines in australia, making up about1.5 percnt; of the population of 16 million. The Aborigine
    http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0023779.html
    Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. // Show bread crumbs navigation path. breadcrumbs('four'); //> ENCYCLOPAEDIA Hutchinson's
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    Men's Health ... Wildlife Frames not supported
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    A
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    Or search the encyclopaedia: Australian Aborigine This photograph of an Australian Aboriginal camp was taken in 1895, before the policy of assimilation was implemented. This policy, which was carried out between 1910 and 1970, involved Aboriginal children being removed from their homes in the Northern Territory and either put in orphanages or placed in white families.
    The Arnhem Land Escarpment, a stark sandstone wall, marks the western edge of Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia. Rich in uranium, bauxite, and manganese, Arnhem Land was threatened with ruthless exploitation. The 1976 Aboriginal Land Act gave the land rights to the Aboriginal groups of the area, and permission to mine must be obtained from them.
    Aborigines in the Australian outback. Aboriginal people have lived in Australia for more than 40,000 years. When Europeans began to colonize Australia in the late 18th century, there were around 300,000 Aborigines, of perhaps 500 different linguistic and cultural groups, on the continent. Very few now live in the remote outback, most having moved into the cities or large towns.

    60. AboriginesBiblio
    The aborigines of Western australia. Black australia An Annotated Bibliographyand Teacher s Guide to Resources on aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.
    http://www.aihgs.com/aborigin.htm
    The Australian Aborigines Bibliography
    Abbie , A.A. 1969. The Original Australians. London: Frederick Muller. Atkinson , Alan and Aveling, Marian. 1987. Australians - 1838. Berndt , Ronald M. and Catherine H. 1980. Aborigines of the West - Their Past and Their Present. Perth: University of Western Australia Press. Biskup , Peter. 1973. Not Slaves, Not Citizens: The Aboriginal Problem in Western Australia 1898-1954. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press. Bridges , Barry, 'Pemulwoy: A "Noble Savage"', newsletter of the Royal Australian Historical Society, pp. 3-5, January 1970. Broome , R. 1982. Aboriginal Australians: Black Response to White Dominance 1788-1980. Byrne , Denis. 1984. The Mountains Call Me Back: A History of the Aborigines and the Forests of the Far South Coast of NSW. NSW Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs. Cannon , Michael. 1983. Life in the Country: Australia in the Victorian Age. Melbourne: Currey O'Neil Ross Pty Ltd. Clarke , C.M.H. 1962. A History of Australia. 3 vols. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. -, ed. 1950.

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