Aboriginal Stories Transmit Knowledge of Australia’s Landscape

News September 18, 2015

(Courtesy Taylor & Francis)
SHARE:
Australia coastline memory
(Courtesy Taylor & Francis)

SIPPY DOWNS, AUSTRALIA—Geographer Patrick Nunn of the University of the Sunshine Coast and linguist Nick Reid of the University of New England studied Aboriginal stories from 21 different places around the coastline of Australia. The stories described a time when sea levels were significantly lower than they are today, some 7,000 years ago. “These stories talk about a time when the sea started to come in and cover the land, and the changes this brought about to the way people lived—the changes in landscape, the ecosystem, and the disruption this caused to their society,” Nunn said in a press release. “It is important to note that it’s not just one story that describes this process. There are many stories, all consistent in their narrative, across 21 diverse sites around Australia’s coastline.” Nunn thinks that the information survived for so long because it was vital. “I believe these stories endured that long partly due to the harshness of Australia’s natural environment, which meant that each generation had to pass on knowledge to the next in a systematic way to ensure its survival,” he concluded. For more, go to "The Rock Art of Malarrak."

  • Features July/August 2015

    In Search of a Philosopher’s Stone

    At a remote site in Turkey, archaeologists have found fragments of the ancient world’s most massive inscription

    Read Article
    (Martin Bachmann)
  • Letter from Virginia July/August 2015

    Free Before Emancipation

    Excavations are providing a new look at some of the Civil War’s earliest fugitive slaves—considered war goods or contraband—and their first taste of liberty

    Read Article
    (Library of Congress)
  • Artifacts July/August 2015

    Gold Lock-Rings

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum of Wales)
  • Digs & Discoveries July/August 2015

    A Spin through Augustan Rome

    Read Article
    (Courtesy and created at the Experiential Technologies Center, UCLA, ©Regents of the University of California)