Wakabunga
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Wakabunga are an indigenous Australian people of the state of Queensland.
Norman Tindale referred to material by two early correspondents, Urquhart and O'Reilley, in a publication by E. M. Curr for details about the Wakabunga and their language, but the word-list is not considered to contain elements of this tongue, about which the general belief is that no information survives. It has been suggested by Barry Blake however,[1] that a word-list compiled in the Wakabunga domain by Curr's brother Montagu Curr,[2] belong to a Mayi dialect. From this it has been inferred that Wakabunga may have belonged to the Mayi language family.
The Wakabunga traditional lands covered an estimated 4,900 square miles (13,000 km2) in the area of the Upper Leichhardt River and Gunpowder Creek.[3]
According to Norman Tindale they were related to the Kalkatungu.[3] They were crocodile hunters, stalking freshwater crocodiles with spears on the upper Leichhardt.[4]
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