Australian Aboriginal culture explained

Australian Aboriginal culture includes a number of practices and ceremonies centered on a belief in the Dreamtime and other mythology. Reverence and respect for the land and oral traditions are emphasised. The words "law" and "lore", the latter relating to the customs and stories passed down through the generations, are commonly used interchangeably. Learned from childhood, lore dictates the rules on how to interact with the land, kinship and community.

Over 300 languages and other groupings have developed a wide range of individual cultures. Aboriginal art has existed for thousands of years and ranges from ancient rock art to modern watercolour landscapes. Traditional Aboriginal music developed a number of unique instruments, and contemporary Aboriginal music spans many genres. Aboriginal peoples did not develop a system of writing before colonisation, but there was a huge variety of languages, including sign languages.

Oral tradition

Cultural traditions and beliefs as well as historical tellings of actual events are passed down in Aboriginal oral tradition, also known loosely as oral history (although the latter has a more specific definition). Some of the stories are many thousands of years old.In a study published in February 2020, new evidence produced using radiometric dating showed that both Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes erupted at least 34,000 years ago.[1] Significantly, this is a "minimum age constraint for human presence in Victoria", and also could be interpreted as evidence for the Gunditjmara oral histories which tell of volcanic eruptions being some of the oldest oral traditions in existence.[2] An axe found underneath volcanic ash in 1947 was also proof that humans inhabited the region before the eruption of Tower Hill.

Art and crafts

See main article: Indigenous Australian art. Australian Aboriginal art has a history spanning thousands of years. Aboriginal artists continue these traditions using both modern and traditional materials in their artworks. Aboriginal art is the most internationally recognizable form of Australian art. Several styles of Aboriginal art have developed in modern times including the watercolour paintings of Albert Namatjira, the Hermannsburg School, and the acrylic Papunya Tula "dot art" movement. Painting is a large source of income for some Central Australian communities such as at Yuendumu.

Basket weaving has been traditionally practised by the women of many Aboriginal peoples across the continent for centuries.[3] [4] [5] [6]

Astronomy

See main article: Australian Aboriginal astronomy.

For many Aboriginal cultures, the night sky is a repository of stories and law. Songlines can be traced through the sky and the land. Stories and songs associated with the sky under many cultural tents.[7]

Beliefs

See also: Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology. Aboriginal Australians' oral tradition and spiritual values build on reverence for the land and on a belief in the Dreamtime, or Dreaming. The Dreaming is considered to be both the ancient time of creation and the present-day reality of Dreaming. It describes the Aboriginal cosmology, and includes the ancestral stories about the supernatural creator-beings and how they created places. Each story can be called a "Dreaming", with the whole continent criss-crossed by Dreamings or ancestral tracks, also represented by songlines.[8]

There are many different groups, each with their own individual culture, belief structure and language.

Sacred sites

See main article: Australian Aboriginal sacred sites. To Aboriginal people, some places are sacred, owing to their central place in the mythology of the local people.[10]

Customary law

See main article: Australian Aboriginal customary law. The words "law" and "lore" are commonly used interchangeably: "law" was introduced by the British, whereas "lore" relates to the customs and stories from the Dreamtime, which has been passed on through countless generations through songlines, stories and dance. Learned from childhood, lore dictates the rules on how to interact with the land, kinship and community.[11]

Kurdaitcha

See main article: Kurdaitcha. Kurdaitcha (or kurdaitcha man, and also spelled kurdaitcha, gadaidja, cadiche, kadaitcha, or karadji)[12] is a type of shaman amongst the Arrernte people, an Aboriginal group in Central Australia. The kurdaitcha may be brought in to punish a guilty party by death. The word may also relate to the ritual in which the death is willed by the kurdaitcha man, known also as bone-pointing.

The expectation that death would result from having a bone pointed at a victim is not without foundation. Other similar rituals that cause death have been recorded around the world.[13] Victims become listless and apathetic, usually refusing food or water with death often occurring within days of being "cursed". When victims survive, it is assumed that the ritual was faulty in its execution. The phenomenon is recognized as psychosomatic in that death is caused by an emotional response—often fear—to some suggested outside force and is known as "voodoo death". As this term refers to a specific religion, the medical establishment has suggested that "self-willed death", or "bone-pointing syndrome" is more appropriate.[14] [15] In Australia, the practice is still common enough that hospitals and nursing staff are trained to manage illness caused by "bad spirits" and bone pointing.[16]

Arnhem Land

The complete system of Yolngu customary law is the "Madayin", which embodies the rights and responsibilities of the owners of the law, or citizens (rom watangu walal, or simply rom). Madayin includes the rom, as well as the objects that symbolise the law, oral rules, names and song cycles, and the sacred places that are used to maintain, develop and provide education in the law.[17] Rom can be roughly translated as "law" or "culture", but it embodies more than either of these words.[18] Galarrwuy Yunupingu has described Rom watangu as the overarching law of the land, which is "lasting and alive... my backbone".[19]

It covers ownership of land and waters and the resources within this region; it controls production trade; and includes social, religious and ethical laws. These include laws for conservation and farming of flora and fauna. Observance of Madayin creates a state of balance, peace and true justice, known as Magaya.[17]

Rom includes bush crafts such as basket-weaving and mat-making, and stories which teach history, hunting, spear-making, gathering food, building shelters and rafts, various rituals, and taking care of others.

"Rom" is a word and concept shared by at least one of the nearby peoples, the Anbarra, who also perform a Rom ceremony.[20]

Ceremonies and sacred objects

Aboriginal ceremonies have been a part of Aboriginal culture since the beginning, and still play a vital part in society.[21] They are held often, for many different reasons, all of which are based on the spiritual beliefs and cultural practices of the community.[22] They include Dreaming stories, secret events at sacred sites, homecomings, births and deaths.[23] They still play a very important part in the lives and culture of Aboriginal people. They are performed in Arnhem Land and Central Australia with the aim of ensuring a plentiful supply of foods; in many regions they play an important part in educating children, passing on the lore of their people, spiritual beliefs and survival skills; some ceremonies are a rite of passage for adolescents; other ceremonies are around marriage, death or burial. Most include dance, song, rituals and elaborate body decoration and/or costume. Ancient Aboriginal rock art shows ceremonies and traditions are still continued today.[24]

Ceremonies provide a time and place for everyone in the group and community to work together to ensure the ongoing survival of spiritual and cultural beliefs. Certain stories are individually "owned" by a group, and in some cases dances, body decoration and symbols in a ceremony pass on these stories only within the group, so it is vital that these ceremonies are remembered and performed correctly. Men and women have different roles, and are sometimes appointed as guardians of a sacred site, whose role it is to care for the site and the spiritual beings who live there, achieved partly by performing ceremonies. The terms “men’s business” and “women’s business” are sometimes used; neither have greater spiritual needs or responsibilities than the other, but jointly ensure that sacred practices are passed on. Men often conduct ceremonies, but women are also guardians of special knowledge, hold great spiritual power within a group, and conduct ceremonies. Participation in ceremonies can also be restricted by age, family group, language group, but are sometimes open to all, depending on the purpose of the ceremony.[22]

Right of access to songs and dances pertaining to a specific ceremony belong to a certain defined group (known as manikay by the Yolngu peoples of north-east Arnhem Land, or clan songs[25]); some may be shared with people outside the community, but some are never shared. There is a wide range of songs, dances, music, body ornamentation, costume, and symbolism, designed to connect the body with the spiritual world of the ancestors. Ceremonies help to sustain Aboriginal identity as well as the group's connection to country and family.[22]

Examples of ceremonies

Musical instruments and other objects

The didgeridoo originated in northern Australia, but is now used throughout the continent. Clapsticks, seed rattles and objects such as rocks or pieces of wood are used; in a few areas, women play a drum made from goanna, snake, kangaroo or emu skin.[22]

Cuisine

See main article: Bush tucker. Animal native foods include kangaroo, emu, witchetty grubs and crocodile, and plant foods include fruits such as quandong, kutjera, spices such as lemon myrtle and vegetables such as warrigal greens and various native yams. Since the 1970s, there has been recognition of the nutritional and gourmet value of native foods by non-Indigenous Australians, and the bushfood industry has grown enormously.[41]

Medicine

Pituri is a mixture of leaves and wood ash traditionally chewed as a stimulant (or, after extended use, a depressant) by Aboriginal Australians widely across the continent. Leaves are gathered from any of several species of native tobacco (Nicotiana) or from at least one distinct population of the species Duboisia hopwoodii. Various species of Acacia, Grevillea and Eucalyptus are burned to produce the ash. Traditional healers (known as Ngangkari in the Western jester areas of Central Australia) are highly respected men and women who not only acted as healers or doctors, but also generally served as custodians of important Dreaming stories.[42]

Fire practices

Cultural burning, identified by Australian archaeologist Rhys Jones in 1969, is the practice of regularly and systematically burning patches of vegetation used in Central to Northern Australia to facilitate hunting, to reduce the frequency of major bush-fires, and to change the composition of plant and animal species in an area. This "fire-stick farming", or "burning off", reduces the fuel-load for a potential major bush fire, while fertilising the ground and increasing the number of young plants, providing additional food for kangaroos and other fauna hunted for meat. It is regarded as good husbandry and "looking after the land" by Aboriginal people of the Northern Territory.[43]

Language

See main article: Australian Aboriginal languages. The Australian Aboriginal languages consist of around 290–363 languages belonging to an estimated 28 language families and isolates, spoken by Aboriginal Australians of mainland Australia and a few nearby islands. The relationships between these languages are not clear at present. Many Australian Aboriginal cultures have or traditionally had a manually coded language, a signed counterpart of their oral language. This appears to be connected with various speech taboos between certain kin or at particular times, such as during a mourning period for women or during initiation ceremonies for men.

Avoidance speech in Australian Aboriginal languages is closely tied to elaborate tribal kinship systems in which certain relatives are considered taboo. Avoidance relations differ from tribe to tribe in terms of strictness and to whom they apply. Typically, there is an avoidance relationship between a man and his mother-in-law, usually between a woman and her father-in-law, and sometimes between any person and their same-sex parent-in-law. For some tribes, avoidance relationships are extended to other family members, such as the mother-in-law's brother in Warlpiri or cross-cousins in Dyirbal. All relations are classificatory – more people may fall into the "mother-in-law" category than just a man's wife's mother.

Australian Aboriginal English (AAE) is a dialect of Australian English used by a large section of the Indigenous Australian (Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander) population. Australian Kriol is an English-based creole language that developed from a pidgin used in the early days of European colonisation. The pidgin died out in most parts of the country, except in the Northern Territory, which has maintained a vibrant use of the language, spoken by about 30,000 people. It is distinct from Torres Strait Creole.

Literature

See main article: Indigenous Australian literature. At the point of the first colonisation, Indigenous Australians had not developed a system of writing, so the first literary accounts of Aboriginal people come from the journals of early European explorers, which contain descriptions of first contact.[44]

A letter to Governor Arthur Phillip written by Bennelong in 1796 is the first known work written in English by an Aboriginal person.[45]

While his father, James Unaipon, contributed to accounts of Ngarrindjeri mythology written by the missionary George Taplin in South Australia,[46] David Unaipon (1872–1967) provided the first accounts of Aboriginal mythology written by an Aboriginal person, Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines (1924–25), and was the first Aboriginal author to be published.

The Yirrkala bark petitions of 1963 are the first traditional Aboriginal document recognised by the Australian Parliament.[47]

Oodgeroo Noonuccal (1920–1993) was a famous Aboriginal poet, writer and rights activist credited with publishing the first Aboriginal book of verse: We Are Going (1964).[48]

Sally Morgan's 1987 memoir My Place brought Indigenous stories to wider notice.

Leading Aboriginal activists Marcia Langton (First Australians documentary TV series, 2008) and Noel Pearson (Up from the Mission, 2009) are contemporary contributors to Australian non-fiction. Other voices of Indigenous Australians include the playwright Jack Davis and Kevin Gilbert.

Writers coming to prominence in the 21st century include Kim Scott, Alexis Wright, Kate Howarth, Tara June Winch, Yvette Holt and Anita Heiss. Indigenous authors who have won Australia's Miles Franklin Award include Kim Scott, who was joint winner (with Thea Astley) in 2000 for Benang and again in 2011 for That Deadman Dance. Alexis Wright won the award in 2007 for her novel Carpentaria. Melissa Lucashenko won the Miles Franklin Award in 2019 for her novel Too Much Lip.[49]

Music

Aboriginal people have developed unique musical instruments and folk styles. The didgeridoo is often considered the national instrument of Aboriginal Australians; however, it was traditionally played by peoples of Northern Australia, and only by the men. It has possibly been used by the people of the Kakadu region for 1500 years.

Clapping sticks are probably the more ubiquitous musical instrument, especially because they help maintain rhythm. More recently, Aboriginal musicians have branched into rock and roll, hip hop and reggae. Bands such as No Fixed Address and Yothu Yindi were two of the earliest Aboriginal bands to gain a popular following among Australians of all cultures.

In 1997 the State and Federal Governments set up the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts (ACPA) to preserve and nurture Aboriginal music and talent across all styles and genres from traditional to contemporary.

Sport and games

See main article: Indigenous Australian sport. Woggabaliri is a traditional Indigenous Australian "co-operative kicking volley game". The Indigenous in areas of and near New South Wales played a ball game called Woggabaliri. The ball was usually made of possum fur, and was played in a group of four to six players in circle. It was a co-operative kicking game to see for how long the ball can be kept in the air before it touches the ground.[50] The Djab Wurrung and Jardwadjali people of western Victoria once participated in the traditional game of Marn Grook, a type of football played with possum hide. The game is believed by some commentators, including Martin Flanagan,[51] Jim Poulter and Col Hutchinson, to have inspired Tom Wills, inventor of the code of Australian rules football.

Similarity between Marn Grook and Australian football include jumping to catch the ball or high "marking", which results in a free kick. Use of the word "mark" in the game may be influenced by the Marn Grook word mumarki, meaning "catch".[52] However, this is likely a false etymology; the term "mark" is traditionally used in Rugby and other games that predate AFL to describe a free kick resulting from a catch,[53] in reference to the player making a mark on the ground from which to take a free kick, rather than continuing to play on.[54]

There are many Indigenous AFL players at professional level, with approximately one in ten players being of Indigenous origin .[55] [56] The contribution of the Aboriginal people to the game is recognized by the annual AFL "Dreamtime at the 'G" match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground between Essendon and Richmond football clubs (the colors of the two clubs combine to form the colours of the Aboriginal flag).

Testifying to this abundance of Indigenous talent, the Aboriginal All-Stars, an AFL-level all-Aboriginal football side competes against any one of the Australian Football League's current football teams in pre-season tests. The Clontarf Foundation and football academy is just one organisation aimed at further developing aboriginal football talent. The Tiwi Bombers began playing in the Northern Territory Football League and became the first all-Aboriginal side to compete in a major Australian competition.

Coreeda is a style of folk wrestling practiced in Australia and is based on Aboriginal combat sports that existed in the pre-colonial period before the 19th century.[57] Combining the movements of the traditional kangaroo dance as a warm up ritual, with a style of wrestling that utilizes a yellow 4.5 meter diameter circle that has black and red borders (similar to the Aboriginal flag), Coreeda is often compared to sports as diverse as capoeira and sumo.[58]

A popular children's game in some parts of Australia is weet weet, or throwing the play stick. The winner throws the weet weet furthest or the most accurately.[59]

See also

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sian. Johnson . Study dates Victorian volcano that buried a human-made axe . ABC News . 26 February 2020 . 9 March 2020.
  2. Matchan. Erin L.. Phillips. David. Jourdan. Fred. Oostingh. Korien. Early human occupation of southeastern Australia: New insights from 40Ar/39Ar dating of young volcanoes. Geology. 2020. 48 . 4 . 390–394 . 0091-7613. 10.1130/G47166.1. 2020Geo....48..390M . 214357121 .
  3. Web site: 1 March 2017. About weaving. 25 January 2020. Maningrida.
  4. Web site: 9 April 2017. History of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander textiles. 25 January 2020. archive.maas.museum.
  5. Web site: Mills. Vanessa. 21 July 2011. Weaving magical baskets and sharing Aboriginal knowledge. 25 January 2020. ABC Kimberley. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  6. Web site: 24 August 2016. Ngarrindjeri basket weaving. 25 January 2020. Sustainable Communities SA.
  7. Book: Peter D'Arcy. The Emu in the Sky: Stories about the Aboriginals and the day and night skies. The emu in the sky is shown in the dark space between stars° - The Emu. The National Science and Technology Centre. 1994. 978-0-64618-202-5. Margo Sutton. 15, 16.
  8. Web site: Rainbow dreaming [ceremonies explained] ]. Aboriginal Incursions . 16 January 2020.
  9. Andrews, M. (2000) 'The Seven Sisters', Spinifex Press, North Melbourne, p. 428
  10. Web site: Sacred sites. . Northern Territory Government. 12 February 2020.
  11. Web site: The Law and the Lore . Working with Indigenous Australians . 19 February 2017 . 29 January 2020.
  12. See James Cowan, Mysteries of the Dream-time: Spiritual Life of the Australian Aborigines, 2nd Revised edition, Prism Press, 1992 .
  13. Roonka. Compiled by Dr Keryn Walshe for the South Australian Museum. Hyde Park Press 2009
  14. Web site: Hahn. Patrick D. 4 September 2007. Scared to Death: Self-Willed Death, or the Bone-Pointing Syndrome. Biology Online.
  15. Book: Cannon, Walter. Voodoo Death. 169–181.
  16. Book: Emergency and Trauma Nursing. Elsevier Australia. 2007. 978-0-7295-3769-8. Curtis. Kate. 34. Ramsden. Clair. Friendship. Julie.
  17. Web site: About Yolngu. Nhulunbuy Corporation . https://web.archive.org/web/20200220095326/http://ncl.net.au/play/about-yolngu/ . 19 December 2022. 20 February 2020 .
  18. Web site: Yolŋu Rom (Law and Culture) . Yidaki Story . 2 August 2016 . 29 January 2020.
  19. The Monthly. Rom Watangu . Galarrwuy. Yunupingu. Galarrwuy Yunupingu. July 2016. 19 July 2020.
  20. Web site: ROM: An Aboriginal ritual of democracy . Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies . 20 January 2015 . 19 December 2022. The first ROM ceremony, a 'ritual of diplomacy', performed outside Arnhem Land was held when the Anbarra people...presented a Rom to AIATSIS in 1982.. Blurb of 1986 book by Stephen Wild.
  21. Web site: Aboriginal ceremonies. Indigenous in Style. 17 January 2020.
  22. Aboriginal Ceremonies. Queensland Government and Queensland Studies Authority. Resource: Indigenous Perspectives: Res008. February 2008. 17 January 2020.
  23. Web site: Aboriginal Culture: Aboriginal Cultural Ceremonies. Mbantua Fine Art Gallery and Cultural Museum . 16 January 2020.
  24. Web site: Traditional Aboriginal Ceremonial Dancing . Artlandish Aboriginal Art Gallery . 15 July 2015 . 16 January 2020.
  25. Web site: Song Types in the Top End . Manikay.Com . 22 January 2020. Peter. Lister.
  26. Web site: Tom Petrie's Reminiscences of Early Queensland . https://web.archive.org/web/20131029211258/http://www.seqhistory.com/index.php/aboriginals-south-east-queensland/thomas-petrie/66-pt1-chpt5 . 2022-12-20 . 29 October 2013 .
  27. Web site: Yolngu clans pay tribute to cherished Gumatj leader Yunupiŋu at Garma Festival bunggul . Tahnee . Jash. . 6 August 2023 . 5 August 2023.
  28. Web site: Hennessy . Kate . Garma: art and politics come together for a moving Arnhem Land festival . . 6 August 2015 . 6 August 2023.
  29. Web site: Lindsay . Kirstyn . Tjungu Festival 2017: Anangu Senior Women share law and understanding of coming together . NITV Radio. SBS . 4 May 2017 . 12 February 2020.
  30. Web site: Tjanpi Desert Weavers. Inma (dance and song) performance . 12 February 2020.
  31. Web site: IY2019: Saving language through Dreaming story . Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications . 8 July 2019 . 12 February 2020.
  32. Book: Brown, Reuben. A Different Mode of Exchange:: The Mamurrng Ceremony of Western Arnhem Land. A Different Mode of Exchange . 2017. A Distinctive Voice in the Antipodes. 41–72. Gillespie. Kirsty. Essays in Honour of Stephen A. Wild. ANU Press. j.ctt1trkk4c.9. 978-1-76046-111-9. Treloyn. Sally. Niles. Don.
  33. Book: Hutcherson, Gillian. Djalkiri Wanga: The Land is My Foundation. Berndt Museum of Anthropology. 1995. 0864224214. Western Australia.
  34. Norris. Ray P.. 2016. Dawes Review 5: Australian Aboriginal Astronomy and Navigation. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia. en. 33. e039. 10.1017/pasa.2016.25. 1607.02215 . 2016PASA...33...39N . 1323-3580. free.
  35. Web site: Yalangbara: art of the Djang'kawu. Banduk. Marika . West . Margie . . 7 December 2010 . 18 July 2021.
  36. Web site: Burial - Pukumani, Tiwi Islands . The Australian Museum . 10 February 2020. 6 December 2018.
  37. Web site: Being Tiwi: the work of 9 artists from the Tiwi Islands - Stories & ideas . MCA Australia . 10 February 2020.
  38. Web site: AIATSIS. Art and object. Wally . Caruana. 4 August 2014 . 26 December 2019.
  39. Web site: Gapuwiyak School celebrates Yolngu Rom . Department of Education . 28 April 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200401013320/https://education.nt.gov.au/news/2017/gapuwiyak-school-celebrates-yolngu-rom . 19 December 2022. 1 April 2020 .
  40. Web site: Robinson . Scott . The archaeologist as hero in Billy Griffiths' Deep Time Dreaming . Overland . 12 December 2018 . 11 April 2020.
  41. Book: 0-207-16930-6 . Wild Food Plants of Australia . Low . Tim . 1991 . Angus & Robertson .
  42. Traditional Healers of Central Australia: Ngangkari. Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Women's Council Aboriginal Corporation. 2013. Magabala Books, Broome, WA, pp. 15-19.
  43. Kakadu Man, by Big Bill Neidjie, Stephen Davis, and Allan Fox, 1986,
  44. Book: Genoni, Paul. Subverting the Empire: Explorers and Exploration in Australian Fiction. Common Ground. 2004. Altona, VIC.
  45. Web site: Maher. Louise. 8 August 2013. Treasure Trove: Bennelong's letter. 6 January 2020. 666 ABC Canberra. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  46. Book: Jenkin, Graham. Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri. Rigby. 1979. Adelaide. 9780727011121.
  47. Web site: Documenting Democracy. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110601205536/http://www.foundingdocs.gov.au/item.asp?dID=104. 1 June 2011. 2011-06-02.
  48. Web site: Modern Australian poetry. Ministère de la culture. https://web.archive.org/web/20110410090353/http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/poetry/index.htm . 10 April 2011 .
  49. Web site: 2019 Miles Franklin Literary Award shortlist unveiled Perpetual. 2019-08-13. www.perpetual.com.au.
  50. Web site: Woggabaliri. 20 December 2022. NSW Government - Office of Sport.
  51. Martin Flanagan, The Call. St. Leonards, Allen & Unwin, 1998, p. 8 Martin Flanagan, 'Sport and Culture'
  52. Web site: Early History . Footystamps.com.
  53. Web site: Archived copy . 10 April 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121014004521/http://www.irb.com/mm/Document/LawsRegs/0/070110LGLAW18_722.pdf . 14 October 2012 . dead .
  54. Web site: Francis Marindin . 2008-05-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080514032921/http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FmorleyEC.htm . 2008-05-14 .
  55. Web site: Australian Game, Australian Identity:(Post)Colonial Identity in Football . . 2007 . 10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130617020837/http://www.academia.edu/346473/Australian_Game_Australian_Identity . 2013-06-17 .
  56. News: Australian rules football and improving Indigenous relations . The Roar . 22 May 2013.
  57. Web site: Coreeda Association of Australia. Coreedaoz.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20160111121924/http://coreedaoz.com/ . 2022-12-20. 11 January 2016 .
  58. Web site: 2014-01-14. Blog Archive » Coreeda Assoc. of Australia | Documenting & Promoting Traditional Wrestling Styles from Around the World. Wrestling Roots. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303221148/http://wrestlingroots.org/coreeda-assoc-of-australia/ . 2022-12-20. 3 March 2016 .
  59. Web site: Weet weet . . 12 November 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120322061416/http://ausport.gov.au/participating/indigenous/resources/games_and_activities/individual_games/target_games/weet_weet.pdf . 22 March 2012 . dead .