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41 results for "Aboriginal" — page 1 of 3
U_1_23 — Aboriginal Songlines
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks, song cycles, or *yiri in some Aboriginal languages) are an ancient system of oral navigation, cultural law, and cosmological knowledge used by Aboriginal Australian peoples — repre
W_5_15 — Aboriginal Australian Civilizations: 65,000 Years of Continuous Culture
Aboriginal Australians represent the oldest continuous cultural tradition in the world — with archaeological evidence of human occupation of the Australian continent dating back at least 65,000 years (Madjedbebe rock she
ZH_3_03 — Aboriginal Australian Astronomy: Seasonal Star Knowledge
Australian Aboriginal peoples developed one of the oldest continuous astronomical traditions on Earth — an integrated system of sky knowledge extending back at least 50,000 years of habitation on the Australian continent
C_4_18 — Aboriginal Australian Dreamtime Cosmology
Aboriginal Australian Dreamtime (Tjukurpa in Western Desert languages, Jukurrpa in Warlpiri, The Dreaming in English translation) constitutes one of the world's oldest continuously practiced cosmological systems, with cu
ZC_4_18 — Aboriginal Australian Kinship Systems
Aboriginal Australian kinship systems represent some of the most elaborate social classification frameworks ever documented by anthropology. Operating through moiety (2-part), section (4-part), and subsection (8-part) sy
F_1_29 — Aboriginal Australian First Arrival & Deep-Time Heritage
The first arrival of humans in Australia represents the oldest known maritime colonization in human history and one of the most significant events in the story of Homo sapiens. Reaching the continent now called Australia
A_4_17 — Aboriginal Australian Dreaming Narratives
The Dreaming (known by various language-specific names — Jukurrpa in Warlpiri, Tjukurpa in Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara, Wongar in Yolngu) is the central cosmological, legal, and ontological framework of Aboriginal Aus
W_4_06 — Dreamtime Songlines and Aboriginal Navigation
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks or song paths) are one of humanity's most extraordinary intellectual achievements — a vast network of songs that simultaneously encode mythological narrative, geographic navigation
C_4_05 — Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis
This document examines Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include The Deep Time Record, Diversity — Not "A Culture" but a Continent o
H_3_04 — Destruction of Aboriginal Australian Knowledge Systems
The destruction of Aboriginal Australian knowledge systems represents the disruption of the longest continuous cultural tradition on Earth — spanning at least 65,000 years. From the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, co
U_5_14 — Indigenous Australian Art: Dot Painting, Bark Art, and Songlines
Indigenous Australian art constitutes the world's longest continuous artistic tradition — spanning at least 65,000 years from the earliest rock art and engravings to contemporary paintings that sell for six-figure sums i
C_1_15 — Oral Tradition Fidelity: How Accurately Do Myths Preserve Historical Facts?
Oral traditions have long been treated with skepticism by historians trained in text-based source criticism, yet mounting evidence suggests that under certain conditions, oral narratives can preserve accurate information
U_5_24 — Totemism: Animal Ancestors, Sacred Kinship, and Species Identity
Totemism is a system of belief and social organization in which human groups maintain spiritual, ancestral, or kinship relationships with natural species, objects, or phenomena (the "totem"). First documented systematica
ZH_4_18 — Indigenous Star Map Catalog
Indigenous star map systems — the astronomical knowledge embedded in the oral traditions, navigation practices, ceremonial calendars, and landscape relationships of non-Western cultures — represent a vast but systematica
ZH_4_09 — Astronomical Petroglyphs and Rock Art
Humans have carved, painted, and pecked celestial imagery into rock surfaces for at least 10,000 years — and possibly far longer. Astronomical petroglyphs and pictographs are found on every inhabited continent: images of
ZH_3_14 — Nighttime Navigation Without Instruments: Stars, Moon, and Memory
For most of human history, navigators crossing deserts, oceans, and arctic wastes found their way using the stars, the Moon, the Sun's position, and memory — without magnetic compasses, chronometers, or sextants. Non-ins
ZH_5_05 — Cross-Cultural Constellation Patterns: Connecting Star Groupings Worldwide
Every documented human culture groups stars into constellations or asterisms — named patterns that organize the sky into a readable, memorizable, and culturally meaningful map. Yet surprisingly few star groupings are uni
C_4_02 — Pacific Island Serpent & Sky-Being Traditions
The Pacific Ocean encompasses over 165 million square kilometers — the largest single geographic feature on Earth — and yet every habitable island within it was settled by human navigators using knowledge systems of extr
C_5_03 — Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Indigenous knowledge systems represent the longest-running experiments in human survival — the Australian Aboriginal peoples have maintained continuous cultural practice for 65,000+ years, making theirs the oldest living
C_5_30 — Star People Origins: Celestial Ancestry Myths Worldwide
Traditions of celestial ancestry — the belief that humanity, or a founding lineage, originated from or was taught by beings from specific stars or constellations — are found across dozens of cultures worldwide. The Dogon
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