Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements

Last updated

Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements
Macassan stone arrangement.jpg
Stone arrangement, 2005
Location Yirrkala, Northern Territory, Australia
Coordinates 12°19′52″S136°55′58″E / 12.3311°S 136.9328°E / -12.3311; 136.9328 Coordinates: 12°19′52″S136°55′58″E / 12.3311°S 136.9328°E / -12.3311; 136.9328
Official name: Wurrwurrwuy
TypeListed place (Indigenous)
Designated9 August 2013
Reference no. 106088
Australia Northern Territory relief location map.png
Red pog.svg
Location of Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements in Northern Territory

Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements is a heritage-listed indigenous site at Yirrkala, Northern Territory, Australia. It is also known as Wurrwurrwuy. It was added to the Northern Territory Heritage Register on 15 August 2007 and to the Australian National Heritage List on 9 August 2013. [1] [2]

Contents

History

During his epic circumnavigation of Australia in 1802-1803 Matthew Flinders [3] found bamboo frameworks, lines of stone fireplaces, pieces of cloth and the stumps of trees cut down with metal axes, at a number of places along the coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria. He interpreted this as evidence of Chinese visits to this part of Australia. On 16 February 1803, he met a fleet of Macassan praus anchored in the waters off the English Company Islands group. It was here that he learnt from Pobassoo, the captain of the fleet, that Macassan praus came to the coast of northern Australia every year on the north-west monsoon winds to collect and dry trepang or bêche de mer which they then sold to the Chinese. [4] [2]

Interactions between Aboriginal people and Macassans

Dried sea cumber Dried sea cucumber.jpg
Dried sea cumber

Flinders' encounter with Pobassoo is the first Australian record of the north Australian trepang industry. Macassans had probably started to visit the northern Australian coast before 1650 [5] but Dutch East India Company documents suggest that the intensive catching and processing of trepang for the Chinese market probably began in about 1750. [6] [7] Macassan involvement in the industry ended in 1906 when the South Australian Government, which administered the Northern Territory at that time, restricted the issuing of licenses to locally-owned vessels. [2]

The distribution of tamarind trees (an exotic species), trepang processing sites and the depiction of Macassan praus and other items of Macassan material culture in rock art provide direct material evidence for the Macassan trepang industry. Trepang processing sites are found on the Kimberley coast [8] [9] [10] and on the Arnhem Land and Groote Eylandt coasts. [11] While depictions of praus and items of Macassan material culture are not unusual in the rock art of Arnhem Land [12] [13] and offshore islands like Groote Eylandt, [14] [15] Chasm Island [16] and Bickerton Island, [17] such images are rare in the Kimberley. [18] These data and Aboriginal oral tradition suggest that the relationship between Macassans and Aborigines in the Kimberley was different to the relationship between Macassans and Yolngu with the former relationship characterised by hostility. [19] [2]

Aboriginal people in Arnhem adopted a number of items of Macassan material culture [20] [21] [22] [23] including dugout canoes and iron. This transformed Aboriginal economies so they had an increased marine focus. This is shown by the large numbers of dugong and turtle bones in middens on the Coburg Peninsula that date from the time of the Macassan trepang industry [24] and an increased marine focus on Groote Eylandt. [25] [26] There is also evidence for changes in the way Aboriginal people used space and evidence for changes in their exchange networks. [27] [28] [29] [30] [2]

Aboriginal people living in Arnhem Land incorporated the memory of Macassans into their social and cultural life. For example, Macassans and their voyages are important in some ceremonies and song cycles where songs may reference Muslim prayers. [31] [32] [33] [34] Oral tradition also provides accounts of Aboriginal people working for Macassans on trepang sites and undertaking voyages on praus to the Celebes and further afield. [35] [36] The close relationship between Macassans and Aborigines is reflected in the large number of Macassan borrowed words found in Aboriginal languages in Arnhem Land and on Groote Eylandt which includes words for different parts of praus and the rigging on these vessels. Aboriginal people in these areas use the Macassan names for some parts of praus and their rigging that are depicted in rock art. [37] [2]

The stone pictures at Wurrwurrwuy

A type of Macassan perahu, the padewakang Macassan prau.jpg
A type of Macassan perahu, the padewakang

The stone pictures at Wurrwurrwuy are part of the story of Macassan Aboriginal interactions in Arnhem Land. They lie within the territory of the Lamomirri clan but on the death of the last responsible Lamomirri man they were taken into the custody of the Gumatj clan. A father and son, Yumbul and Dhatalamirri, created the pictures, probably in the second half of the nineteenth century. [38] Oral histories recorded in 1967 indicate that Yumbul, possibly with the aid of some of his fellow clansmen, made the first pictures. The site was entrusted to his second son, Dhatalamirri, who added further pictures at a later date. [2]

The stone pictures created by Yumbul and Dhatalamirri depict Macassan praus, canoes, houses with multiple rooms, fireplaces where trepang were boiled, trepang drying houses, a house for storing wood, and stones for sharpening iron knives. There are also pictures of an Aboriginal fish trap and Aboriginal dwellings that may not have been made by the father and son. [2]

When Macknight and Grey recorded the site in 1967, [39] two Aboriginal informants, Munggurrawuy (a Gumatj custodian) and Mawalan (a relative of Yumbul and Dhatalamirri), were able to explain how the divisions within the pictures of the praus represented different parts of the vessel: the crews' quarters, the galley, the eating space, the store and the water tank. They also provided Macassan names for the different parts of praus, the rudder, bowsprit and the tripod mast with its sail and rigging. These pictures show that Yolngu visited trepang sites and spent enough time on praus to learn the various parts of the vessels and where the crew lived and ate. This is consistent with historical records showing that Aboriginal people travelled in praus to the Celebes, [40] [41] a trip that was made by Munggurrawuy's father. [42] The custodians told Macknight and Gray that Wurrwurrwuy was a legacy from the past with no sacred associations. [43] They felt that it was useful as it provided younger men with some idea of the way of life of Macassans who had come to the area to collect trepang. The pictures are a permanent reminder of Yolngu knowledge about this past. [2]

Description

Map showing the Australian National Heritage List boundaries, 2013 Wurrwurrwuy map, showing Australian National Heritage List boundaries, 9 August 2013.pdf
Map showing the Australian National Heritage List boundaries, 2013

Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements is at about 1.41ha, 10km south east of Yirrkala, being those parts of Northern Territory Portions 1044 and 1692 designated Northern Territory Portion 6647(A). [2]

The stone pictures at Wurrwurrwuy that depict aspects of the Macassan trepang industry lie on an open rocky shelf about ten kilometres south east of Yirrkala in Eastern Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. The area is bounded to the north by a small creek: on the west by a strip of dense coastal vine thicket and to the east and south by the sea. The vegetation on the shelf is low grass and stunted shrubs. [2]

The stone pictures cover an area of about 80 metres by 70 metres. They are divided into three groups with a few outlying features. The group of pictures at the southern end of the site mainly depicts Macassan subjects in simple outlines. The northern group also depicts Macassan subjects, but the style is different, with stones of different sizes used to give weight to parts of the pictures. The western group comprises a mixture of Macassan and Aboriginal subjects. [2]

Condition

When first recorded in the 1960s there was some minor damage to the site from buffalo mainly at the southern end, but there has been no evidence for subsequent deterioration. The site has been fenced and paths and interpretive signs have been installed. The place is maintained by Dhimurru Corporation Aboriginal Rangers. [2]

The stone pictures at Wurrwurrwuy are nationally significant as a rare example of stones arranged to depict secular subjects rather than the arranged stones being associated with ceremony and the sacred. The stone pictures depict a range of subjects including Aboriginal camps, fish traps and images relating to the Macassan trepang industry including praus, canoes, the stone fireplaces where trepang were boiled and Macassan houses. The depictions of praus at Wurrwurrwuy show the internal arrangements of the vessels, which is rare in Aboriginal depictions of praus in any medium. The creators of the stone pictures would have acquired their knowledge of the internal arrangement of praus during visits to, or voyages on, such vessels. [2]

Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements was listed on the Australian National Heritage List on 9 August 2013 having satisfied the following criteria. [2]

Criterion B: Rarity

The stone pictures at Wurrwurrwuy have outstanding heritage value to the nation as a rare example of stones arranged to depict utilitarian and secular objects rather than the arranged stones being associated with ceremony and the sacred. It is also a place with rare depictions of the internal arrangements in praus. This is knowledge that the creators would have acquired either during visits to or voyages on such vessels. [2]

Related Research Articles

Groote Eylandt island off the Northern Australian coast

Groote Eylandt is the largest island in the Gulf of Carpentaria and the fourth largest island in Australia. It is the homeland of, and is owned by, the Warnindhilyagwa who speak the Anindilyakwa language.

Kakadu National Park Protected area in the Northern Territory, Australia

Kakadu National Park is a protected area in the Northern Territory of Australia, 171 km southeast of Darwin.

Indigenous Australian art Art made by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia

Indigenous Australian art includes art made by Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia, including collaborations with others. It includes works in a wide range of media including painting on leaves, bark painting, wood carving, rock carving, watercolour painting, sculpting, ceremonial clothing and sand painting; art by Indigenous Australians that pre-dates European colonisation by thousands of years, up to the present day.

Arnhem Land Region in the Northern Territory, Australia

Arnhem Land is a historical region of the Northern Territory of Australia. It is located in the north-eastern corner of the territory and is around 500 km (310 mi) from the territory capital, Darwin. In 1623, Dutch East India Company captain Willem Joosten van Colster sailed into the Gulf of Carpentaria and Cape Arnhem is named after his ship, the Arnhem, which itself was named after the city of Arnhem in the Netherlands.

Makassan contact with Australia

Makassar people from the region of Sulawesi began visiting the coast of northern Australia sometime around the middle of the 1700s, first in the Kimberley region, and some decades later in Arnhem Land. They were men who collected and processed trepang, a marine invertebrate sea cucumber prized for its culinary value generally and for its medicinal properties in Chinese markets. The term Makassan is generally used to apply to all the trepangers who came to Australia. Some were from other islands in the Indonesian Archipelago, including Timor, Rote and Aru.

Norman Tindale Australian biologist

Norman Barnett Tindale AO was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist.

Prehistory of Australia

The prehistory of Australia is the period between the first human habitation of the Australian continent and the colonisation of Australia in 1788, which marks the start of consistent written documentation of Australia. This period has been variously estimated, with most evidence suggesting that it goes back between 50,000 and 65,000 years.

Trepanging

Trepanging is the act of collection or harvesting of sea cucumbers, known in Indonesian as trepang and used as food. The collector, or fisher, of trepang is a trepanger.

Aboriginal stone arrangement

Aboriginal stone arrangements are a form of rock art constructed by Indigenous Australians. Typically, they consist of stones, each of which may be about 30 cm in size, laid out in a pattern extending over several metres or tens of metres. Notable examples have been made by many different Australian Aboriginal cultures, and in many case are thought to be associated with spiritual ceremonies.

Bickerton Island island off the Northern Australian coast

Bickerton Island is 13 km west of Groote Eylandt and 8 km east of the mouth of Blue Mud Bay in eastern Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory of Australia. It is about 21 by 21 kilometres in size, with deep bays and indentations, and has an area of 215 km2. The largest bays are South Bay and North Bay. Bickerton Island was named by Matthew Flinders for Admiral Sir Richard Bickerton, Bt.

In February 1948, a team of Australian and American researchers and support staff came together in northern Australia to begin, what was then, one of the largest scientific expeditions ever to have taken place in Australia—the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land. Today it remains one of the most significant, most ambitious and least understood expeditions ever mounted.

Baijini are a race of people, mythical or historical, mentioned in the Djanggawul song cycle of the Yolngu people, an Aboriginal Australian people of Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory. The myths regarding them have become part of a debate about pre-European presences on the Australian continent, much like the discovery of medieval Kilwa Sultanate coinage on Marchinbar Island.

Gunwinggu Australian Aboriginal tribe

The Gunwinggu (Kunwinjku) people are an Australian Aboriginal people, one of several groups within the Bininj people, who live around West Arnhem Land to the east of Darwin, Northern Territory. Kunwinjku people generally refer to themselves as "Bininj" in much the same way that Yolŋu people refer to themselves as "Yolŋu".

<i>Persoonia falcata</i> species of plant

Persoonia falcata, commonly known as the wild pear, is a shrub native to northern Australia.

Paul S.C. Taçon is an anthropologist and archaeologist who has spent over thirty years conducting field work in destinations ranging from Australia, Botswana, Cambodia, Canada, China, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, South Africa and the United States. In 2011, he was appointed the first Chair in Rock Art research at Griffith University on the Gold Coast, Australia. Paul S.C. Taçon has made several key archaeological discoveries in Australia, most notably in western Arnhem Land (NT) and Wollemi National Park (NSW). These include the earliest rock art evidence of warfare in the world, the origins of the Rainbow Serpent, significant new Arnhem Land rock art sites, rock art discoveries in Wollemi National Park and the oldest rock paintings of Southeast Asian watercraft in Australia.

Makassar people Ethnic group in Indonesia

The Makassar people are an ethnic group that inhabits the southern part of the South Peninsula, Sulawesi in Indonesia. They live around Makassar, the capital city of the province of South Sulawesi, as well as the Konjo highlands, the coastal areas, and the Selayar and Spermonde islands. They speak Makassarese, which is closely related to Buginese and also a Malay creole called Makassar Malay.

Warnindhilyagwa

The Warnindhilyagwa, otherwise (formerly) known as Ingura, are an Aboriginal Australian people living on Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria in the Northern Territory of Australia.

The Bininj are an Aboriginal Australian people of Western Arnhem land in the Northern Territory. The sub-groups of Bininj are sometimes referred to by the various language dialects spoken in the region, that is, the group of dialects known as Bininj Gun-Wok; so the people may be named Gunwinggu, the Kuninjku, Kundjeyhmi (Gundjeihmi), Manyallaluk Mayali, Kundedjnjenghmi and Kune groups. In addition, there are clan groups such as the Mirrar who are prominent in matters relating to looking after the traditional lands.

Sally Kate May is an Australian archaeologist. She is a senior research fellow at the Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit at Griffith University. She is a specialist in Indigenous Australian rock art and Australian ethnographic museum collections.

Mondalmi (1910-1969) Aboriginal matriarch

Mondalmi was an Aboriginal activist and cultural informant from Australia.

References

  1. "Wurrwurrwuy ("Stone Pictures")". Heritage Register. Northern Territory Government. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "Wurrwurrwuy (Place ID 106088)". Australian Heritage Database . Department of the Environment . Retrieved 13 October 2018.
  3. Flinders 1814: Chapters 7 and 8
  4. Flinders 1814: Chapter 9
  5. Taçon et al. 2010
  6. Macknight 1986
  7. Macknight 2011: 133-134
  8. Crawford 1968
  9. Crawford 2001
  10. Morwood and Hobbs 1997
  11. Macknight 1976: Chapter 5
  12. Taçon et al. 2010
  13. May et al. 2010
  14. McCarthy 1960
  15. Clarke and Frederick 2006
  16. McCarthy 1960
  17. Turner 1973
  18. O'Connor and Arrow 2008
  19. Australian Heritage Council 2010
  20. Warner 1932
  21. Thompson 194
  22. Berndt and Berndt 1954
  23. Russell 2004
  24. Mitchell 1996
  25. Clarke 2000a
  26. Clarke 2000b
  27. Mitchell 2000
  28. Clarke 2000a
  29. Clarke 2000b
  30. May et al. 2010
  31. Thompson 1949
  32. Berndt and Berndt 1954
  33. Russell 2004
  34. Macknight 2011
  35. Berndt and Berndt 1954:43, 51-53
  36. Macknight and Gray 1970
  37. Turner 1974: 54, 180-181
  38. Macknight and Gray: 1970
  39. Macknight and Grey 1970: 5
  40. Berndt and Berndt 1954: 54-58
  41. Macknight 1972: 286
  42. McKnight and Gray 1970: 6
  43. Macknight and Gray 1970: 37

Bibliography

Attribution

CC-BY-icon-80x15.png This Wikipedia article was originally based on Wurrwurrwuy , entry number 106088 in the Australian Heritage Database published by the Commonwealth of Australia 2018 under CC-BY 4.0 licence , accessed on 13 October 2018.

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Wurrwurrwuy stone arrangements at Wikimedia Commons