Ngaro people

The Ngaro were a seafaring Australian Aborigine group of people that inhabited the Whitsunday Islands and coastal regions of Queensland, in an area that archaeologically shows evidence of human habitation since 9000 BP.[1][2] Ngaro society was destroyed by warfare with traders, colonists, and the Australian Native Police. The Native Police Corps forcibly relocated the remaining Ngaro aborigines in 1870 to a penal colony on Palm Island or to the lumber mills of Brampton Island as forced laborers.

Country

Ngaro territory amounted to some 200 square miles (520 km2), from Whitsunday and Cumberland islands; ranging over Cumberland Islands and including the coastal mainland areas around Cape Conway. Their inland extension reached as far as the mountains to the east of Proserpine.[3][lower-alpha 1] South Molle Island was an important quarry for materials used in stone manufacture, and Nara Inlet on Hook Island affords archaeologists insights into the earliest Ngaro habitation in this area.

Social organization

The Ngaro were divided into hordes; the name of at least one is known:

Lifestyle

Whitsunday Island formed the centre of Ngaro life, furnishing the only permanent area of habitation.[5] The Ngaro were noted for their distinctive sewn three-piece canoes, crafted from ironbark and known as winta. Despite assertions, notably by Alfred Cort Haddon, that outrigger technology never reached further down the east Queensland coast that 300 miles north of Whitsunday Islands,[lower-alpha 2] the entries in Captain James Cook's Endeavour journals prove that by 1770, the first contact date with Europeans, outriggers were already employed in this area.[6] On these the Ngaro made their journeys and fishing expeditions, sailing not only about the islands in their immediate area but covering an estimated 100 kilometres in and along the reefs, including those between St.Bees and Hayman Island, reefs which they knew intimately.[3][5] Ngaro oral accounts are consistent throughout the historical record in their description of seasonal visits to the Great Barrier Reef, 43 miles from the mainland and 25 miles from the nearest island, in their canoes.[7]

Their diet consisted of sea turtles, flying foxes, fowls, wild cherries, Burdekin plum, damson berries, trochus shells, baler shells, green ant and cockatoo apples.[5] They also hunted large sea mammals such as small whales from these canoes. This was only possible due to their development of barbed harpoon technology that enabled the Ngaro to kill their prey by exhausting them rather than bleeding them to death, which would attract sharks to compete for the catch..

The Ngaro traded with the mainland, and their artifacts such as baler shells for carrying water, and juan knives fashioned from rock at South Molle, which had one of the largest of such pre-European quarries in Australia, found their way a good distance inland and far up the coast.[8][1]

History of contact

Early settler accounts suggest that the Ngaro population consisted of about 100 people, which represents an island population density of roughly 1 person per 98 hectares. They may have been decimated through early contacts by disease, but this figure still represents a comparatively high figure.[5] Derrick Stone writes of their fate as white colonization penetrated their area:-

'Warfare, colonist expansion, disease and the Native Police Corps made their existence tenuous but the Aborigines' final downfall came in 1870 when they were forcibly relocated to a mission settlement on Palm Island and others to Brampton Island to work in timber mills.[9]

Memories of old songs sung in a mixture of Ngaro and Biri are still recalled by descendants.[10]

Rock art

Ngaro Cave Painting Ngaro people.
Ngaro Cave Painting Ngaro people.

The earliest archaeological evidence for habitation in the area has been found at Nara Inlet on Hook Island.[11] Cave openings and nearby mounds, or middens, of oyster-like shells are still visible in the steep slopes of Nara Inlet.

The painting of a hashed oval shape is often presumed to be a sea turtle shell, a prominent food source for the Ngaro and Australian aborigines of the mainland. However, it may represent the fruit of the pandanus plant and its seed.

Alternative names

  • Ngalangi
  • Googaburra[3]

Some words

  • winta (canoe)[3]

Notes

  1. For a revision of Tindale's determinations see Barker.[4]
  2. Lourandos suggests that the Ngaro technology had Melanesian origins[5]

Citations

  1. Dickson 2008.
  2. Barker 2006, pp. 72–84.
  3. Tindale 1974, p. 182.
  4. Barker 1995, p. 28.
  5. Lourandos 1997, p. 47.
  6. Barker 1995, pp. 38–39.
  7. Barker 2006, p. 82.
  8. Barker 1995, p. 34.
  9. Stone 2016, p. 64.
  10. Hayward 2001, pp. 7,50–51.
  11. Veron 2008, p. 181.

Sources

  • Barker, Bryce (1995). The Sea People: Maritime Hunter-gatherers on the Tropical Coast: a Late Holocene Maritime Specialisation in the Whitsunday Islands, Central Queensland. Pandanus Books.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Barker, Bryce (2006). "Hierarchies of knowledge and the tyranny of text: archaeology, ethnohistory and oral traditions in Australian archaeological interpretation". In David, Bruno; Barker, Bruce; McNiven, Ian J. (eds.). The Social Archaeology of Australian Indigenous Societies. Aboriginal Studies Press. pp. 72–84. ISBN 978-0-855-75499-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Bridgeman, George F.; Bucas, Revd H. (1887). "Port Mackay and its Neighbourhood" (PDF). In Curr, Edward Micklethwaite (ed.). The Australian race: its origin, languages, customs, place of landing in Australia and the routes by which it spread itself over the continent. Volume 3. Melbourne: J. Ferres. pp. 44–51.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Dickson, Fiona (25 June 2008). "The Ngaro people of the Whitsundays". ABC Tropical north.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Dixon, Robert M. W. (2002). Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development. Volume 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-47378-1.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Hayward, Philip (2001). Tide lines: music, tourism & cultural transition in the Whitsunday Islands (and adjacent coast). Music Archive for the Pacific Press. ISBN 9780646412979.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Lourandos, Harry (1997). Continent of Hunter-Gatherers: New Perspectives in Australian Prehistory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-35946-7.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Moore, Clive (1990). "Blackgin's Leap: A Windosw into Aboriginal-European Relations in the Pioneer Valley, Queensland in the 1860s" (PDF). Aboriginal History. 14 (1): 61–79.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Smyth, Robert Brough (1878). The Aborigines of Victoria: with notes relating to the habits of the natives of other parts of Australia and Tasmania (PDF). Volume 1. Melbourne: J. Ferres, gov't printer.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Stone, Derrick (2016). Walks, Tracks and Trails of Queensland's Tropics. Csiro Publishing. ISBN 978-1-486-30308-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Tindale, Norman Barnett (1974). "Ngaro (QLD)". Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits, and Proper Names. Australian National University Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Veron, Edward Norwood (2008). A Reef in Time: The Great Barrier Reef from Beginning to End. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02679-7.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.