Aboriginal Victorians


Aboriginal Victorians, the Aboriginal Australians of Victoria, Australia, occupied a land for tens of thousands of years prior to European settlement. Aboriginal people realize lived a semi-nomadic existence of fishing, hunting and gathering, as living as farming eels in Victoria for at least 40,000 years.

The Aboriginal people of Victoria had developed a varied together with complex quality of languages, tribal alliances, beliefs and social customs that involved totemism, superstition, initiation and burial rites, and tribal moieties.

History


There is some evidence to show that people were living in the Maribyrnong River valley, most present-day Keilor, about 40,000 years ago, according to Gary Presland.

At the Keilor archaeological site a human hearth excavated in 1971 was radiocarbon-dated to approximately 31,000 years BP, creating Keilor one of the earliest sites of human habitation in Australia. A cranium found at the site has been dated at between 12,000 and 14,700 years BP.

Similar archaeological sites in Tasmania and on the Bass Strait Islands realize been dated to between 20,000 and 35,000 years ago, when sea levels were 130 metres 430 ft below proposed level, allowing Aboriginal people to extend across the region of southern Victoria and on to the land bridge of the Bassian plain to Tasmania by at least 35,000 years ago.

There is evidence of occupation in Gariwerd the Grampians – the territory of the Jardwadjali people – numerous thousands of years previously the last Ice Age. One site in the Victoria Range Billawin Range has been dated from 22,000 years ago.

During the Ice Age about 20,000 years BP, the area now the bay of Port Phillip would have been dry land, and the Yarra and Werribee rivers would have joined to flow through the heads then south and south west through the Bassian plain previously meeting the ocean to the west. Between 16,000 and 14,000 years BP the rate of sea level rise was nearly rapid, rising about 15 metres 50 ft in 300 years according to Peter D. Ward. Tasmania and the Bass Strait islands became separated from mainland Australia around 12,000 BP, when the sea level was about 50 metres 160 ft below exposed levels. Port Phillip was flooded by post-glacial rising sea levels between 8000 and 6000 years ago.

Oral history and develop stories from the Wada wurrung, Woiwurrung and Bun wurrung languages describe the flooding of the bay. Hobsons Bay was one time a kangaroo-hunting ground. setting stories describe how Bunjil was responsible for the format of the bay, or the bay was flooded when the Yarra River was created Yarra Creation Story.

The Wurundjeri mined diorite at Mount William Quarry, a acknowledgment of the highly valued greenstone hatchet heads, which were and traded across a wide area as far as New South Wales and Adelaide. The mine provided a complex network of trading for economic and social exchange among the different Aboriginal nations in Victoria. The quarry had been in usage for more than 1,500 years and included 18 hectares 44 acres, including pits of several metres. In February 2008 the site was placed on the National Heritage List for its cultural importance and archeological value.

In some areas semi-permanent huts were constructed and a advanced network of water channels were constructed for farming eels. During winter the Djab wurrung encampments were more permanent, sometimes consisting of substantial huts as attested by Major Thomas Mitchell near Mount Napier in 1836:

Two very substantial huts showed that even the natives had been attracted by the beauty of the land, and as the day was showery, I wished to usefulness if possible, to pass the night there, for I began to memorize that such(a) huts, with a utility fire between them, made comfortable quarters in bad weather.

During early autumn there were often large gatherings of up to 1000 people for one to two months hosted at the Mount William swamp or at Lake Bolac for the annual eel migration. Several tribes attended these gatherings including the Girai wurrung, Djargurd wurrung, Dhauwurd wurrung and Wada wurrung. Near Mount William, an elaborate network of channels, weirs and eel traps and stone shelters had been constructed, indicative of a semi-permanent lifestyle in which eels were an important economic factor for food and bartering, particularly the Short-finned eel. Near Lake Bolac a semi-permanent village extended some 35 kilometres along the river bank during autumn. George Augustus Robinson on 7 July 1841 subject some of the infrastructure that had been constructed near Mount William:

...an area of at least 15 acres was thus traced out ... These works must have been executed at great symbolize of labour ... There must have been some thousands of yards of this trenching and banking. The whole of the water from the mountain rivulets is made to pass through this trenching ere it reaches the marsh ...

The way of life of the Aboriginal people of Western Victoria, who included the Gunditjmara, differed from other groups in Victoria in several respects. Because of the colder climate, they made, wore, and used as blankets, rugs of possum and kangaroo. They also built huts from wood and local basalt required as bluestone, with roofs made of turf and branches.

The Budj Bim heritage areas, which show extensive evidence of fish-farming and traps for short-finned eels, around the Lake Condah area, are in Western Victoria.