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QUEENSLAND
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Lamington
National Park
Map
l History
l The
Yugambeh People
l
Access
l
Camping
Climate
l Overview
of walks in Lamington National
Park
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The
Yugambeh People were well
established with their
environment. They understood
seasons, plants and animals and
used these to provide a
comfortable lifestyle. Whereas
early European farming methods
required toil from dawn to dusk
in order to achieve a small
return (European crops where not
suited to early Australian
environments), the Yugambeh
people were able to feed a large
group with just a few hours walk
a day.
Trading
of food was well established
between Aboriginal groups and
early Europeans relied on trading
with the Aborigines to survive.
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The Yugambeh people monitored plant
and animal resources to ensure that food
gathering was both efficient and
sustainable. They gathered nuts, honey and
other plant material, perhaps even
planting many of the nut trees that grow
today. Using an assortment of weaponry,
they hunted a wide variety of species.
Nets were used to catch fish, flighted
birds, land fowl along with land animals
to the size of a kangaroo. Dingoes were
trained to aid in the hunting of wallabies
and kangaroos.
Social
gatherings such as corroborees were well
attended, attracting visitors from as far
as Grafton, Tenterfield and Maryborough.
These corroborees were held for a variety
of reasons, for example, dances,
initiations, feasts, fights and
tournaments. Ornate body decorations were
often worn to corroborees and included
feathers, paints, leaves, flowers, animal
skins and tails. Although these gatherings
could be highly ritual occasions, there
was always one or two men "funny men"
amongst the dancers that would provide
everyone with entertainment from their
antics (similar to the modern day circus
clown).
After
Europeans settlement, the lifestyle of the
Yugambeh people was gradually eroded.
Various attacks of native lifestyle by
convicts, free landholders, Government
acts and other European intervention has
meant that today much of the previous way
of life of the Yugambeh is now forgotten.
However, many are still active in
attempted to preserve what still remains,
such as the Yugambeh language, and
ensuring it is passed on to future
generations.
The
subtropical rainforest in Lamington
National Park provided rich hunting and
gathering grounds for Aborigines.
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Dedicated
to the Diamondvale Project
© 1997 New Realm Media e-mail alessandro@ciaodarling.com

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