词条 | Kuku Nyungkal |
释义 |
| above = Kuku Nyungkal | abovestyle = background-color: #FFFF99 | subheader = Aka: Kokonyungal (Tindale), Gugu Njunggal (AIATSIS), Kuku-Nyungkul (SIL) | image1 = | caption1 = Wet Tropics BioRegion | headerstyle = background-color: #FFFF99 | header1 = Hierarchy | label2 = Language Family: | data2 = Pama–Nyungan | label3 = Language Branch: | data3 = Yalandyic | label4 = Language Group: | data4 = Kuku Yalanji | label5 = Dialect: | data5 = Kuku Nyungkal | label6 = Estates: | data6 = Kuna[1] Ngulungkaban[1] Muwan[1] Jiraraku[1] Wulumuban[1] Ngarrimurril[1] Nyambilnyambil[1] Yulbu[1] Yumal[1] Kabu[1] | header20 = Area (approx. 800 km²) | label22 = BioRegion: | data22 = Wet Tropics | label23 = Location: | data23 = Far North Queensland | label24 = Coordinates: | data24 = {{coord|15|40|S|145|15|E|region:AU-QLD|display=inline,title}} | label25 = Mountains: | data25 = Black Mountain (a.k.a. Kalkajaka[2][12]) Mount Amos (a.k.a. Muku Muku[3] Mount Finnigan | label26 = Rivers | data26 = Annan River (a.k.a. Yuku-Baja[12][15]) Upper Normanby River[16] | label27 = Creeks | data27 = Russell Creek (a.k.a. Ngarrilmurril[12]) Banana Creek | label28 = Other Geological: | data28 = Shiptons Flat (a.k.a. Kuna[15]) Kings Plain (a.k.a. Dandi[15]) Cedar Bay (a.k.a. Mangkalba[15]) Hope Islands | label29 = Settlements: | data29 = Helenvale (a.k.a. Bibikarrbaja[4]), Rossville (a.k.a. Ngulangaban[4]) | header30 = Notable Individuals | data31 = Noel Pearson[5] | data32 = Henrietta Marrie }} The Kuku Nyungkal people (or Annan River Tribe[24]) are a group of Aboriginal Australians who are the original custodians of the coastal mountain slopes, wet tropical forests, waters, and waterfalls of the Upper Annan River, south of Cooktown, Queensland All Kuku Nyungkal people share in common social descent from ancestors who back to time immemorial have transmitted, from generation to generation, their Kuku Nyungkal dialect, knowledge, names (for people, places, and things), traditions, heritage, plus lore[6] In 1995 Queensland's Aboriginal Land Tribunal, relying on Kuku Nyungkal genealogical material submitted to them, estimated the total population of Kuku Nyungkal people to be "at least 900" (not including those people who had married into Kuku Nyungkal families)[6] CountryNorman Tindale's (1974) Catalogue of Australian Aboriginal tribes identifies Kokonyungal country as covering from "Annan River; south to Rossville; west to Annan-Normanby Divide"[7] Kuku Nyungkal people, in their own country based Strategic Plan, describe the extent of their country as follows:[8]
A locally informed and produced "Bama Way" map acknowledges Kuku Nynungkal country and advises it is bounded to the north by the lower Annan River (a.k.a. Yuku Baja), and to the south by Russell Creek (a.k.a. Ngarrilmurril')[9] LoreKuku Nyungkal local lore for their country has been described to anthropologist Dr Christopher Anderson as follows[10]
HistoryPrior to the 1880s, Kuku Nyungkal people had, since time immemorial, possessed, occupied, used and enjoyed their country in accordance with their lore[8] as follows:
In 1885 tin was discovered at Mount Amos, within Kuku Nyungkal country, following which Kuku Nyungkal people first experienced a small scale "invasion" by tin miners, then decades of sustained tin mining of their country[6][11] Looking back, in retrospect, Kuku Nyungkal people living in the area, reflected on the tin mining era, leading anthropologist Dr Christopher Anderson to conclude:[10]
Over the decades that followed Queensland authorities felt it necessary to progressively encourage and often forcibly remove Kuku Nyungkal people from the tin mining areas and associated external settlement, into lands specially reserved for the purpose such as Ayton,[9] Hopevale, Yarrabah, and other reserves.[12] During the 1950s Lutheran Church of Australia properly established an Aboriginal mission on the Bloomfield River, into which the remnant Kuku Nyungkal population still living on their country were moved.[8] The Lutheran Church described the situation as follows:[13]
PresentBy 1995, one century after the initial "invasion" by tin miners, an Aboriginal Land Tribunal inquired into the extent to which Kuku Nyungkal traditions, beliefs, and people had been impacted by the colonization of their country. At that time Kuku Nyungkal representatives submitted, and the Tribunal agreed:[6]
On 9 December 2007, the Kuku Nyungkal people were included within an overarching Federal Court native title determination in which their legal right to their own lands and waters was retrospectively acknowledged, and new exclusive rights to possess, occupy, use and enjoys some of their original lands along the Annan River was restored[14] See also
Notes1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Anderson, Christopher (1983) "Aborigines and Tin Mining in North Queensland: A case study in the Anthropology of Contact History" The Australian Journal of Anthropology 13(6): 473-498 2. ^Environmental Protection Agency (Qld) "Black Mountain ((Kalkajaka) National Park - Features" Accessed 24 February 2009 3. ^Anderson 1983: 475) 4. ^1 2 3 4 5 Hershberger, Henry & Hershberger Ruth (1986) "Kuku Yalanji Dictionary Summer Institute of Linguistics. Darwin" Accessed 16 March 2009 5. ^Aboriginal Land Tribunal (1995) "Aboriginal Land Claim to Available Crown Land near Helenvale: Wunbuwarra - Banana Creek" Report to the Hon. Minister for Lands, November 1995, Queensland Government. 6. ^1 2 3 4 Australian Indigenous Law Reporter (1996) Aboriginal Land Claim to Available Crown Land near Helenvale: Wunbuwarra - Banana Creek Accessed 14 March 2009 7. ^1 Tindale, Norman (1974) "Kokobujundji (QLD)" in his Catalogue of Australian Aboriginal Tribes. South Australian Museum Accessed 13 March 2009 8. ^1 2 Bana Yarraliji Bubu Incorporated (2008) Strategic Plan for Kuku Nyungkal Country. Cairns. 9. ^1 2 3 4 "Bama Way" map Accessed 13 March 2009 10. ^1 Anderson, Christopher (1983) Aborigines and Tin Mining in North Queensland: A Case Study in the Anthropology of Contact History" Mankind Vol. 13.No. 6.pp 473-498 11. ^{{cite QHR|3908|Collingwood Water Race|602257|accessdate=25 February 2009}} 12. ^Anderson, C & Coastes, S (1989) "Like a Crane Standing on One Leg on a Little Island". Research Study No. 1. The Underlying Causes for the Deaths of Australian Aboriginal People in Government Detention. National Aboriginal and Islander Legal Services Secretariat. 13. ^Lutheran Church of Australia(Queensland) (1978) "Report of Visitation 11–29 June", quoted in Bana Yarraliji Bubu Incorporated (2008) Strategic Plan for Kuku Nyungkal Country. Cairns. 14. ^National Native title (2007) "Eastern Kuku Yalanji People's native title determination" Accessed 16 March 2009 References
External links
2 : Aboriginal peoples of Queensland|Far North Queensland |
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