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Nguburinji

Aboriginal Australian people of north-west Queensland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Nguburinji people, also written Ngoborindi, Oborindi[1] and other variations, are an Aboriginal Australian people whose traditional lands lie in northwest Queensland.

Country

According to Norman Tindale, the Nguburinji lands extended over 3,100 square miles (8,000 km2) taking in the southern headwaters of the Gregory River. They were also present at what is the World Heritage fossil site of Riversleigh, Gregory Downs, and Mount Margaret. Their northern boundaries reached up to Lawn Hill Creek and Punjaub.[1]

Their land lay to the south of the Yukulta / Ganggalidda, west of the Mingin people, east of the Waanyi, and north of the Injilarija[2] (whose lands the Waanyi occupied around 1880, when the Injilarija became extinct[3][4] ).

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Social system

According to Lauriston Sharp, the Nguburinji social organisation belonged to the Laierdila typology of the Australian system of kinship characterised by the Mara type of semi-moieties with a segmentary lineage,[5] and had eight sub-sections organised as unnamed patrilineal semi-moieties and moieties.[6]

History of contact

Over time, after the advent of European colonisation, the Nguburinji shifted to the Wakabunga country around Morstone Downs.[1]

Language

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Nguburinji (Ngubirindi) is regarded as a dialect of the Yukulta (Ganggalida) language. It is in the Tangkic language group.[7]

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Alternative names

  • Ngoborundji, Ngoboringi
  • Oborindi, Oboroondi, Obor-indi

Source Tindale 1974, p. 183:

Notes

Sources

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