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Aboriginal Australians use of minerals and resources: Ceremonial and Cultural Use

Year 9 Science and Year 11 Earth and Environmental Science

Tasmanian Government

"Stone arrangement" is a term used to describe any feature in the landscape which has been created through the deliberate placement or arrangement of stones by Aboriginal people. Typically, these stone arrangements are walls, paths, pits, cairns, alignments, fish traps and seal hides.

Japingka

Ochre still has a spiritual significance to Indigenous people and an ancient connection that goes back unbroken for tens of thousands of years.

Aboriginal Heritage Office

A stone quarry is a site in which Aboriginal people collected suitable types of stone for the manufacturing of tools, ceremonial and sacred items.

ClickView

Learn about the discovery of hundreds of stone huts on the banks of an ancient aquafarm which challenges the idea that Aboriginal peoples were nomadic.

Dynamic Earth

In Central Australia, there were three kinds of ochre used in the main. They were yellow ochre, white ochre – or white pipe clay – and red ochre. One of the most widely used ochres was red ochre, which was extensively used on the body. And in some particular mines in Central Australia, the ochre has a mica component, and when it’s placed on the body, particularly on the face, it gives off quite a shiny look. And that’s still used today in ceremonies, and is traded all around Central Australia and beyond.

YouTube

Kombumerri Country and People are from the Gold Coast region of Queensland, Australia. This video is part of a series created by the Kombumerri Together Project: one family's perspective to share important cultural knowledge.

luyni mungalina is a waterfall in Launceston, Tasmania. Indigenous language teacher Rosetta Thomas shares the story behind the falls and explains the special role they play in traditional dance and ceremonies.

Anthropology from the Shed

Ochre as a ritual and ceremonial decoration for tools

Australians Together

For thousands of years, in many regions throughout Australia, red ochre has been, and remains, an important commodity and the most highly prized and important pigment for use in ceremony, cosmetics, body and artefact decoration, and rock painting

ABC News

    

Oldest Aboriginal pottery discovered in Far North Queensland, say researchers.