Breaking: Namatjira artworks & royalties back in family hands | Welcome To Country

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A battle that lasted over half a century came to a sudden end this week when Legend Press reached an agreement with the Namatjira family.

Source: Breaking: Namatjira artworks & royalties back in family hands | Welcome To Country

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Former Whitlam minister and deputy Labor leader Tom Uren dies aged 93 – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

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Former Whitlam minister and deputy Labor leader Tom Uren dies at the age of 93.

Source: Former Whitlam minister and deputy Labor leader Tom Uren dies aged 93 – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

It’s So Hot in Australia Roads Are Melting Under ‘Blast Furnace’ Heat

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Saturday was expected to be the first extreme heat day of the year.

Source: It’s So Hot in Australia Roads Are Melting Under ‘Blast Furnace’ Heat

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Mungo Man: Australia’s oldest remains taken to ancestral home

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http://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-42020675

Mungo Man: Australia’s oldest remains taken to ancestral home

An Aboriginal elder prepares to welcome the return of the remains of Mungo ManImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe return of the remains was welcomed with a traditional ceremony

For decades, Australia’s oldest human remains – an Aboriginal man who died about 42,000 years ago – have been stored at a university in Canberra.

But on Friday, the skeleton known as Mungo Man was returned to his traditional home in New South Wales and honoured with a ceremony.

It marked the end of a long campaign by indigenous Australians to return Mungo Man to his original resting place.

The discovery of the skeleton in 1974 helped rewrite Australia’s history.

Research determined that Mungo Man had been buried in a complex funeral ritual, redefining scientific understanding of early Australians.

Who was Mungo Man?

The skeleton was unearthed by geologist Jim Bowler from a dry lake bed in Mungo National Park, about 750km (470 miles) west of Sydney, in what was hailed a major discovery.

Mr Bowler had already discovered the remains of a woman, known as Mungo Lady, in 1967.

A casket holding the remains of Mungo ManImage copyrightNSW OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENT & HERITAGE
Image captionMungo Man’s repatriation was completed on Friday

The remains of Mungo Man were taken to the Australian National University in Canberra to be studied.

Carbon dating showed they were about 42,000 years old – Australia’s oldest known human skeleton.

Scientists determined that Mungo Man had been a hunter-gatherer with arthritis who died around the age of 50.

He was buried on his back with his hands crossed in his lap, and covered with red ochre. Scientists believe the ochre was most likely sourced about 200km from the burial site.

Long journey home

Indigenous Australians from the region have long called for the remains to be returned, saying his removal caused great pain.

Representatives from the Mutthi Mutthi, Ngiyampaa and Paakantji/Barkandji communities held a ceremony to mark the occasion on Friday.

“So good to have him back after all those years he has been taken away,” said Mutthi Mutthi elder Mary Pappin.

Indigenous dancers welcome Mungo Man remains back to countryImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe remains made a three-day journey from Canberra to Mungo National Park

“We have been waiting all those years to get him back and I’m so glad he is back, to put him in his resting place.”

He will be buried in a secret location in Mungo National Park. Mungo Lady was returned to the site in 1991.

The Australian National University relinquished the remains in 2015 and apologised for causing hurt over Mungo Man’s original removal.

In an article for The Conversation in 2015, Mr Bowler wrote: “In 1974, in that remote saltbush country between the rivers, Aboriginal advice remained unavailable to us.

“Subsequently, when Mungo Man’s discovery was announced, Aboriginal people expressed anger that this should have been done without the permission of Aboriginal people.”

For the last two years, the remains have been kept at the National Museum of Australia in Canberra while repatriation plans were being finalised. His remains, along with 104 others, were collected earlier this week.

The recovery of ancestral remains has often been a source pain for Aboriginal Australians. Campaigners say many skeletons removed without permission are yet to be returned, with some housed in museums overseas.

In July, archaeologists found the first evidence to suggest that Aboriginal people have been in Australia for at least 65,000 years.

 

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Stonehenge: Australia’s forgotten farmers – AOL News

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More than 1,056 miles northwest of Sydney, Australia’s Stonehenge could not be more different from its famous namesake.

Fonte: Stonehenge: Australia’s forgotten farmers – AOL News

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When the bullin shrieked: Aboriginal memories of volcanic eruptions thousands of years ago – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

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Aboriginal stories can coarsely bracket ancient volcanic eruptions in Australia and provide detail about what happened before, during and after they occurred.

Fonte: When the bullin shrieked: Aboriginal memories of volcanic eruptions thousands of years ago – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

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Would You Recognize Australian Actor Paul ‘Crocodile Dundee’ Hogan Today?

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He played the lovable hero do-gooder Crocodile Dundee. But you probably wouldn’t recognize him today.

Fonte: Would You Recognize Australian Actor Paul ‘Crocodile Dundee’ Hogan Today?

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a descoberta da Austrália , genocídio aborígene, a portuguesa cidade do sacramento e muito mais

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estes temas e muitos mais em

https://www.academia.edu/people/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=chrys+chrystello

 

ou no portal aicl

 

Crónicas Austrais 1978-1998 4ª edição de 2015

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Most confusing road signs: Sydney example called Australia’s ‘most useless’

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MOTORISTS using one of Australia’s most complex intersections have been left scratching their heads after being confronted with a road sign so confusing no one has any idea what it means.

Fonte: Most confusing road signs: Sydney example called Australia’s ‘most useless’

https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/motoring/a-road-sign-in-sydney-has-been-called-australias-most-useless/news-story/18f20562a6cd0a85268fc9ae738823eb