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Ngarkat

The Ngarkat is a recorded title of a tribal group from South Australia. The Ngarkat lands had linked the mallee peoples of Victoria and South Australia to the river peoples of the Murray River Murraylands. Ngarkat language has been loosely grouped with Peramangk language though not by linguists, and the grouping was perhaps partly owed to the co-ownership of lands in both the Ninety Mile Desert and Echunga by John Barton Hack, and partly to the occasional meeting of tribes. The language of the Ngarkat was recorded as being Boraipur by Ryan in recent times[1] though sources were not given, while it may yet be telling that the citing work concerns Mallee peoples to the east. The language may have been midway between that of mallee peoples to the east, and that of peoples to the west recorded by Teichelmann and Schurman.[2] It is known that songlines linked the Coorong to the Mallee regions,[3] hence went through Ngarkat land. It is also known that Ngarkat people did meet regularly with tribes to the east, at sites along the Murray.[4][5]

Country edit

The Ngarkat's traditional lands have been estimated by Norman Tindale to have extended over some 8,700 square miles (23,000 km2) of the Mallee scrub belt lying east of the Murray River. They took in Alawoona south as far as Pinnaroo, Taunta, Keith, Tintinara, and Coonalpyn. Their eastern boundaries reached Tatiara and about Murrayville[6][a] Kimber argued that Tindale had pushed the Ngarkat territorial extension into lands properly possessed by the Wotjobaluk to their east, and takes the Jackegilbrab around Bordertown as belonging to the latter, but a distinct tribe.[8]

Ecology edit

The Ngarkat lived on a largely waterless karst plateau.[9] Rainfall varies from 8 inches in the north to 18 in the south. Winters can be freezing, while temperatures could hit 118 °F (48 °C) in summer, though averaging 100 °F (38 °C). In no part of the land was there a single perennial stream; water was found in soakages, by working mallee roots or culling whatever hollow trees retained, or rock cleavages held. Waterskins were manufactured from kangaroo and wallaby hides.[10]

The lack of surface water determined much of their lifestyle. Neighbouring tribes such as the Warki, Jarildekald, and Portaulun lived in areas where they could hunt and trap animals, fish and ducks, and such resources enabled a more settled tribal existence.[11] The Ngarkat, conversely, were an ever-shifting nomadic people, lacking even a fixed nomenclature for the mallee groves where they pitched camp and drew water from the mallee roots. The few stable points of return, which allowed a seasonal living base, were named and the lore of the ancestral beings of each clan developed only in such places.[12][13]

In periods of severe drought the Ngarkat withdrew to the Devon Downs Rock-shelter,[b] called Ngautngaut, on the Murray River, to which they were permitted access by a track down the cliff. In local mythology this Ngautngaut was a Being who dwelt in the mallee scrubland, who had been murdered when he knelt down on his knees to slake his thirst at a water-hole.[c][d]

Social organization edit

The Ngarkat subtribal units were widely dispersed given the scarcity of water[16] and were divided into six hordes, according to an old Tatiara informant[e]

  • Kooinkill
  • Wirriga
  • Chala
  • Camiagiiigara
  • Niall
  • Munkoora[18]

Material culture edit

The Ngarkat faced a particular problem in making implements, millstones, hammers and axes, since suitable stone or rock materials were quite rare in their area. Onsets of highly arid weather, on draining soakages, yield evidence, aside from skeletons, of tools fashioned from chert, quartzite and jasp-opal.[8]

Despite its arid inhospitable terrain, Ngarkat territory was crisscrossed by trade routes, from Lake Hindmarsh to Bordertown, from Nhill to Murrayville and Pinnaroo, from the Wirrurgren Plain north of Lake Albacutya through Pinnaroo country to the Murray Bridge area. The items bartered along these trails were things like yabbyclaw necklaces, pipe clay, red ochre, diorite stone axes, and the like.[19]

Relations with other tribes edit

The Ngarkat, who often had to seek water on other tribal lands, had difficult relations with several tribes. One aetiological legend, according to the Ngarrindjeri elder Matt Rigney, explains the pink waters of Lake Bumbunga, often called by settlers "Pink Lake", as the outcome of a bloody battle between the Ngarrindjeri and the Ngarkat which left many slain warriors in its waters.[20]

Their lands were considered in surrounding tribal lore as dangerous and "legends of fear" circulated concerning its proneness to hurricanes, or its putative infestation by malign spirits. Its Tatiara denizens were said to prey on human flesh, though ritual cannibalism was also attested among many other tribes, and was not uncommon. had the Ngarkat practised it, in times of extreme scarcity of food, they would not have been an exception.[19]

History of contact edit

The explorer Edward Eyre passed through Ngarkat lands during his 1940-1841 travels. He wrote of the tribe (calling them Arkatko[f]) that they shared similar "dialects" but were mutually unintelligible unless a common third dialect was used to bridge misunderstandings.[g]

According to Richard Glyn Kimber only 50 of the Jackegilbrab horde survived into the mid-1840s, attributing the decline to disease.[22] It has also been suggested that many of the Ngarkat were massacred though it is unclear by who. A burial site of 70 skeletons weas documented at a soakage in the Lameroo district by early pioneers.[23]

The tribal name has been restored and conserved in the South Australian landscape by the establishment of a locality called Ngarkat, and by setting aside part of its traditional land as the Ngarkat Conservation Park.

Alternative names edit

  • Ngerget
  • Ngarkato
  • Arkatko
  • Boraipar. (language name)
  • Baripung (barip means "man".)
  • Boripar, Booripung
  • Tatiari. (regional name for mallee desert)
  • Thatiari. (general term)
  • Duwinbarap (eastern term barap = man).
  • Doenbauraket
  • Tjakulprap. (southeastern term parap, a form of barab, meaning "man").
  • Jakalbarap, Jackalbarap
  • Jacke-gilbrab
  • Ngalundji (a name for language)
  • Nalunghee
  • Wularuki (name for southwestern group)

Tribal exonyms edit

  • Ngeruketi. (Maraura term)
  • Ratarapa (Nganguruku term)
  • Mangkarupi (Jarildekalde term)
  • Merkani/Merkanie (Jaralde and Tangane term, means "enemy")
  • Jakel-baluk (Wotjobaluk term)
  • Baine Hill tribe (horde around Lameroo).[6]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ronald Berndt placed them on the western side of Lake Alexandrina opposite the Jarildekald on the eastern banks[7]
  2. ^ Devon Downs Rock Shelter was to become the first site of an Australian archaeological dig. It was conducted by Norman Tindale and Herbert Hale in 1929. Their stratification analysis established a seminal framework for the periodization of habitative sequences on the Australian continent.[14][15]
  3. ^ Tindale cites Mathews, 1904 (Gr. 6452) p 367. This is a slight error: the reference should be G6451[16]
  4. ^ Ngautngaut, of the mythical ngurumba-nguttya people, murdered blacks to suck their blood. He was immune to injury, save for one part of his body: his Achilles’ heel was his tongue. The twin Brambambulaty brothers of northwestern Victorian mythology set up a trap to kill him. They created a spring at one of his lurking places, Gurabo, and stuck in the water a sharpened legbone from a kangaroo. Then they assumed the form of two dead trees nearby. Coming to the site, Ngautngaut could sense their presence, and shook the trunks, but both appeared to be rotting, Still uneasy, he left, and the trees "sang" a duet to induce him to be more thirsty. Three times the scene repeated itself. Then he bent down almost touching the surface of the water with his mouth, but again, wary, several times he withdrew. Finally, reassured, he knelt and drank, and the shaft of bone shot up and drilled him through the tongue, killing him.[17]
  5. ^ Yilgoonin gave testimony to a police trooper, Humphries, stationed at Bordertown. He named the Ngarkat "Jackegilbrab", which Tindale takes as a section.[18]
  6. ^ "Eyre being tone deaf to initial ng heard the tribal name as Arkatko."[16]
  7. ^ In others the dialects are so totally unlike one another, that natives, meeting upon opposite sides of a river, cannot speak to or understand a word of what each other say, except through the medium of a third language, namely that spoken by the natives of the river itself, and which is totally unlike either of the other two. This is the case at Moorunde, where three different dialects meet, the Yakkumban, or dialect spoken by the Paritke tribe, or natives inhabiting the scrub to the west and north-west of the Murray. The Boraipar or language of the Arkatko tribe, who inhabit the scrub to the east of the Murray, and the Aiawong or river dialect, extending, with slight variations, from the junction of the Murray and Lake Alexandrina to the Darling[21]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Ryan, Edward (26 September 2023). "Water for country, words for water". Water for country, words for water: Indigenous placenames of north-west Victoria and south-west New South Wales. ANU Press, in Indigenous and Minority Placenames: Australian and International Perspectives, Eds: Ian D. Clark, Luise Hercus, Laura Kostanski (2014). pp. 293–304. ISBN 9781925021622. JSTOR j.ctt13www5z.19. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Teichelmann, C. G.; C. W. Schürmann (1840). Outlines of a grammar, vocabulary and phraseology of the Aboriginal language of South Australia spoken by the natives in and for some distance around Adelaide. Lutheran Missionary Society, Adelaide.
  3. ^ "Timeless Macedon (Macedon Ranges, Wurundjeri, Taungurrung & Dja Dja Wurrung Countries, VIC)". Back to Nature. Episode 4. 31 August 2021. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  4. ^ Harris, C.R. (1982). A brief history of the Ninety Mile Desert. Nature Conservation Society of South Australia. ISBN 9780949751041. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  5. ^ "Peramangk A Social History of the Aboriginal People of the Southern Mount Lofty Ranges (2011)" (PDF). Phasai at Deviantart. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  6. ^ a b Tindale 1974, pp. 215–216.
  7. ^ Berndt 1940, p. 164.
  8. ^ a b Kimber 1969, p. 3.
  9. ^ Keast 2013, p. 41.
  10. ^ Kimber 1969, p. 2.
  11. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 61.
  12. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 40.
  13. ^ Tindale 1974, p. 60.
  14. ^ Lower-Eskelson 2014, p. 224.
  15. ^ Smith 1982, p. 109.
  16. ^ a b c Tindale 1974, p. 215.
  17. ^ Mathews 1904, pp. 364–369.
  18. ^ a b Taplin 1879, p. 59.
  19. ^ a b Kimber 1969, pp. 3–4.
  20. ^ Weir 2009, p. 141.
  21. ^ Eyre 1845, p. 331.
  22. ^ Kimber 1969, p. 4.
  23. ^ Kimber 1969, p. 5.

Sources edit

ngarkat, other, uses, recorded, title, tribal, group, from, south, australia, lands, linked, mallee, peoples, victoria, south, australia, river, peoples, murray, river, murraylands, language, been, loosely, grouped, with, peramangk, language, though, linguists. For other uses see Ngarkat The Ngarkat is a recorded title of a tribal group from South Australia The Ngarkat lands had linked the mallee peoples of Victoria and South Australia to the river peoples of the Murray River Murraylands Ngarkat language has been loosely grouped with Peramangk language though not by linguists and the grouping was perhaps partly owed to the co ownership of lands in both the Ninety Mile Desert and Echunga by John Barton Hack and partly to the occasional meeting of tribes The language of the Ngarkat was recorded as being Boraipur by Ryan in recent times 1 though sources were not given while it may yet be telling that the citing work concerns Mallee peoples to the east The language may have been midway between that of mallee peoples to the east and that of peoples to the west recorded by Teichelmann and Schurman 2 It is known that songlines linked the Coorong to the Mallee regions 3 hence went through Ngarkat land It is also known that Ngarkat people did meet regularly with tribes to the east at sites along the Murray 4 5 Contents 1 Country 2 Ecology 3 Social organization 4 Material culture 5 Relations with other tribes 6 History of contact 7 Alternative names 8 Tribal exonyms 9 Notes 9 1 Citations 10 SourcesCountry editThe Ngarkat s traditional lands have been estimated by Norman Tindale to have extended over some 8 700 square miles 23 000 km2 of the Mallee scrub belt lying east of the Murray River They took in Alawoona south as far as Pinnaroo Taunta Keith Tintinara and Coonalpyn Their eastern boundaries reached Tatiara and about Murrayville 6 a Kimber argued that Tindale had pushed the Ngarkat territorial extension into lands properly possessed by the Wotjobaluk to their east and takes the Jackegilbrab around Bordertown as belonging to the latter but a distinct tribe 8 Ecology editThe Ngarkat lived on a largely waterless karst plateau 9 Rainfall varies from 8 inches in the north to 18 in the south Winters can be freezing while temperatures could hit 118 F 48 C in summer though averaging 100 F 38 C In no part of the land was there a single perennial stream water was found in soakages by working mallee roots or culling whatever hollow trees retained or rock cleavages held Waterskins were manufactured from kangaroo and wallaby hides 10 The lack of surface water determined much of their lifestyle Neighbouring tribes such as the Warki Jarildekald and Portaulun lived in areas where they could hunt and trap animals fish and ducks and such resources enabled a more settled tribal existence 11 The Ngarkat conversely were an ever shifting nomadic people lacking even a fixed nomenclature for the mallee groves where they pitched camp and drew water from the mallee roots The few stable points of return which allowed a seasonal living base were named and the lore of the ancestral beings of each clan developed only in such places 12 13 In periods of severe drought the Ngarkat withdrew to the Devon Downs Rock shelter b called Ngautngaut on the Murray River to which they were permitted access by a track down the cliff In local mythology this Ngautngaut was a Being who dwelt in the mallee scrubland who had been murdered when he knelt down on his knees to slake his thirst at a water hole c d Social organization editThe Ngarkat subtribal units were widely dispersed given the scarcity of water 16 and were divided into six hordes according to an old Tatiara informant e Kooinkill Wirriga Chala Camiagiiigara Niall Munkoora 18 Material culture editThe Ngarkat faced a particular problem in making implements millstones hammers and axes since suitable stone or rock materials were quite rare in their area Onsets of highly arid weather on draining soakages yield evidence aside from skeletons of tools fashioned from chert quartzite and jasp opal 8 Despite its arid inhospitable terrain Ngarkat territory was crisscrossed by trade routes from Lake Hindmarsh to Bordertown from Nhill to Murrayville and Pinnaroo from the Wirrurgren Plain north of Lake Albacutya through Pinnaroo country to the Murray Bridge area The items bartered along these trails were things like yabbyclaw necklaces pipe clay red ochre diorite stone axes and the like 19 Relations with other tribes editThe Ngarkat who often had to seek water on other tribal lands had difficult relations with several tribes One aetiological legend according to the Ngarrindjeri elder Matt Rigney explains the pink waters of Lake Bumbunga often called by settlers Pink Lake as the outcome of a bloody battle between the Ngarrindjeri and the Ngarkat which left many slain warriors in its waters 20 Their lands were considered in surrounding tribal lore as dangerous and legends of fear circulated concerning its proneness to hurricanes or its putative infestation by malign spirits Its Tatiara denizens were said to prey on human flesh though ritual cannibalism was also attested among many other tribes and was not uncommon had the Ngarkat practised it in times of extreme scarcity of food they would not have been an exception 19 History of contact editThe explorer Edward Eyre passed through Ngarkat lands during his 1940 1841 travels He wrote of the tribe calling them Arkatko f that they shared similar dialects but were mutually unintelligible unless a common third dialect was used to bridge misunderstandings g According to Richard Glyn Kimber only 50 of the Jackegilbrab horde survived into the mid 1840s attributing the decline to disease 22 It has also been suggested that many of the Ngarkat were massacred though it is unclear by who A burial site of 70 skeletons weas documented at a soakage in the Lameroo district by early pioneers 23 The tribal name has been restored and conserved in the South Australian landscape by the establishment of a locality called Ngarkat and by setting aside part of its traditional land as the Ngarkat Conservation Park Alternative names editNgerget Ngarkato Arkatko Boraipar language name Baripung barip means man Boripar Booripung Tatiari regional name for mallee desert Thatiari general term Duwinbarap eastern term barap man Doenbauraket Tjakulprap southeastern term parap a form of barab meaning man Jakalbarap Jackalbarap Jacke gilbrab Ngalundji a name for language Nalunghee Wularuki name for southwestern group Tribal exonyms editNgeruketi Maraura term Ratarapa Nganguruku term Mangkarupi Jarildekalde term Merkani Merkanie Jaralde and Tangane term means enemy Jakel baluk Wotjobaluk term Baine Hill tribe horde around Lameroo 6 Notes edit Ronald Berndt placed them on the western side of Lake Alexandrina opposite the Jarildekald on the eastern banks 7 Devon Downs Rock Shelter was to become the first site of an Australian archaeological dig It was conducted by Norman Tindale and Herbert Hale in 1929 Their stratification analysis established a seminal framework for the periodization of habitative sequences on the Australian continent 14 15 Tindale cites Mathews 1904 Gr 6452 p 367 This is a slight error the reference should be G6451 16 Ngautngaut of the mythical ngurumba nguttya people murdered blacks to suck their blood He was immune to injury save for one part of his body his Achilles heel was his tongue The twin Brambambulaty brothers of northwestern Victorian mythology set up a trap to kill him They created a spring at one of his lurking places Gurabo and stuck in the water a sharpened legbone from a kangaroo Then they assumed the form of two dead trees nearby Coming to the site Ngautngaut could sense their presence and shook the trunks but both appeared to be rotting Still uneasy he left and the trees sang a duet to induce him to be more thirsty Three times the scene repeated itself Then he bent down almost touching the surface of the water with his mouth but again wary several times he withdrew Finally reassured he knelt and drank and the shaft of bone shot up and drilled him through the tongue killing him 17 Yilgoonin gave testimony to a police trooper Humphries stationed at Bordertown He named the Ngarkat Jackegilbrab which Tindale takes as a section 18 Eyre being tone deaf to initial ng heard the tribal name as Arkatko 16 In others the dialects are so totally unlike one another that natives meeting upon opposite sides of a river cannot speak to or understand a word of what each other say except through the medium of a third language namely that spoken by the natives of the river itself and which is totally unlike either of the other two This is the case at Moorunde where three different dialects meet the Yakkumban or dialect spoken by the Paritke tribe or natives inhabiting the scrub to the west and north west of the Murray The Boraipar or language of the Arkatko tribe who inhabit the scrub to the east of the Murray and the Aiawong or river dialect extending with slight variations from the junction of the Murray and Lake Alexandrina to the Darling 21 Citations edit Ryan Edward 26 September 2023 Water for country words for water Water for country words for water Indigenous placenames of north west Victoria and south west New South Wales ANU Press in Indigenous and Minority Placenames Australian and International Perspectives Eds Ian D Clark Luise Hercus Laura Kostanski 2014 pp 293 304 ISBN 9781925021622 JSTOR j ctt13www5z 19 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Teichelmann C G C W Schurmann 1840 Outlines of a grammar vocabulary and phraseology of the Aboriginal language of South Australia spoken by the natives in and for some distance around Adelaide Lutheran Missionary Society Adelaide Timeless Macedon Macedon Ranges Wurundjeri Taungurrung amp Dja Dja Wurrung Countries VIC Back to Nature Episode 4 31 August 2021 Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 1 October 2021 Harris C R 1982 A brief history of the Ninety Mile Desert Nature Conservation Society of South Australia ISBN 9780949751041 Retrieved 1 October 2021 Peramangk A Social History of the Aboriginal People of the Southern Mount Lofty Ranges 2011 PDF Phasai at Deviantart Retrieved 30 September 2021 a b Tindale 1974 pp 215 216 Berndt 1940 p 164 a b Kimber 1969 p 3 Keast 2013 p 41 Kimber 1969 p 2 Tindale 1974 p 61 Tindale 1974 p 40 Tindale 1974 p 60 Lower Eskelson 2014 p 224 Smith 1982 p 109 a b c Tindale 1974 p 215 Mathews 1904 pp 364 369 a b Taplin 1879 p 59 a b Kimber 1969 pp 3 4 Weir 2009 p 141 Eyre 1845 p 331 Kimber 1969 p 4 Kimber 1969 p 5 Sources editBerndt R M December 1940 Some Aspects of Jaralde Culture South Australia Oceania 11 2 164 185 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4461 1940 tb00283 x JSTOR 40327890 Eyre Edward John 1845 Journals of expeditions of discovery into central Australia and overland from Adelaide to King George s Sound in the years 1840 1 PDF Vol 2 London T and W Boone Keast Allen 2013 Biogeography and Ecology in Australia Springer ISBN 978 9 401 76295 3 Kimber Richard Glyn 28 July 1969 Ngarkat An Extinct Tribe of Mallee Aborigines PDF Journal of the Anthropological Society of South Australia 7 6 2 5 Lower Eskelson Kylie 2014 Australia In Carver Martin Gaydarska Bisserka Monton Subias Sandra eds Field Archaeology from Around the World Ideas and Approaches Springer pp 224 226 ISBN 978 3 319 09819 7 Mathews R H 1904 Ethnological notes on the Aboriginal tribes of New South Wales and Victoria Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 38 Part I 203 381 doi 10 5962 p 359439 Smith M A October 1982 Devon Downs Reconsidered Changes in Site Use at a Lower Murray Valley Rockshelter Archaeology in Oceania 17 3 109 116 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4453 1982 tb00052 x JSTOR 40386597 Taplin George 1879 Folklore manners customs and languages of the South Australian aborigines PDF Adelaide E Spiller Acting Government Printer Tindale Norman Barnett 1974 Ngarkat SA Aboriginal Tribes of Australia Their Terrain Environmental Controls Distribution Limits and Proper Names Australian National University Press ISBN 978 0 708 10741 6 Weir Jessica K 2009 Murray River Country An Ecological Dialogue with Traditional Owners Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 978 0 855 75678 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ngarkat amp oldid 1183923822, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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