The quirky origins of Australia’s native animal names

Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h

In Australia there are more than 250 Indigenous languages including around 800 dialects. Languages are living things that connect people to Country, culture and ancestors. Many words for Australian native animals come from these languages.

‘Keriba gesep agiakar dikwarda keriba mir. Ableglam keriba Mir pako Tonar nole atakemurkak.’ — The land actually gave birth to our language. Language and culture are inseparable.

Bua Benjamin Mabo, Meriam linguist

MELANIE HAVA / BROLGAS

Language is identity

‘Language is part of our songlines, stories, spirituality, law, culture, identity and connection. Language transfers important knowledge passed down from our Ancestors and Elders that guides us.’

– Lynnice Church, Ngunnawal

Graham Badari – Kangaroo

‘Bandicoot’: an Indian name for big Asian rat

Emu – Portuguese/South American in origin, named for the rheas in South America, big flightless birds like those endemic to Australia.

Goanna – comes from the word ‘iguana’.

‘Echidna’ and ‘platypus’ – these started off as scientific names and quickly made their way into the Australian vernacular.

Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h

There is now a push towards giving Australian native animals the names originally given to them by Australia’s First Nation’s peoples instead of foreign Latin names with no cultural meaning attached to place.

Aboriginal mythology incorporates Ancestor spirits that are related to important animals into Dreamtime law, and animals like kangaroos, emus, koalas and wombats features prominently in the culture of Indigenous groups across Australia. Their images are seen in paintings from the furtherest south to the most northern regions of the continent.

Many Aboriginal names have a pleasing phonetic sound on the tongue and mouth when spoken. Like the ‘Woylie’, or in English the ‘brush-tailed bettong’; or ‘kakarratul and itjaritjari’ in place of ‘northern and southern marsupial mole’.

Rock carving of a koala at Blackfellows Head, Westleigh in northern Sydney. A rock carving of a noose which was used by Aboriginals to get koalas out of the trees is located nearby. Photographer: Ralph Hawkins, circa 1970.

There is also a growing trend for using scientific names that draw upon Aboriginal words. One striking example is the red and yellow mountain frog or the Philoria kundagungan. In the Kabi language of southern Queensland, ‘kunda’ means mountain and ‘gungan’ means frog.

By using these phonetically beautiful and interesting words, it’s just another way that everyone can honour and respect the traditional custodians of the land – by using the original names of the animals living there. Below are some of the original names so that you know.

Local animals
badagarang eastern grey kangaroo
banggarai swamp wallaby
buduru potoroo
bugul, wurra mouse, rat
bungu flying phalanger
burumin possum
dingu dingo
djubi sugar glider
dun tail
ganimung Gaimard’s rat-kangaroo
marriyagang tiger cat
mirrin brown marsupial mouse
wanyuwa horse
wirambi bat
wiring female animals
wubin feather-tail or pygmy glider
wulaba rock wallaby
wularu wallaroo
wumbat wombat
Reptiles
bayagin leaf-tailed gecko
daning death adder
gan reptiles (snake, goanna or lizard)
malya, diamond python
ngarrang bearded dragon
wirragadar bandy-bandy
Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Banksian cockatoo 1790s.Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Birds
binit tawny frogmouth
binyang bird
bubuk boobook owl
buming redbill
bunda hawk
bunyarinarin masked lapwing
burumurring wedge-tailed eagle
diamuldiamul whistling kite
dyaramak sacred kingfisher
dyuralya brolga
gaban egg
garadi glossy black cockatoo
garrangabumarri pelican
garrawi sulphur-crested cockatoo
girra~girra seagull
gugurruk black-shouldered kite
gulina rufous night heron
gulungaga red-browed finch
guma king parrot
guriyal parrot, parrakeet
Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Red breasted or blue parrot. Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
guwali shag, cormorant
marrigang sittella
mulgu black swan
munu. bill
murradjulbi singing bushlark
muruduwin fairy wren
ngunyul feather
ngurra birds’ nest
nuwalgang magpie goose
urwinarriwing eastern curlew
wangawang ground parrot
wilbing wing
wirgan noisy friarbird
wugan crow
wungawunga wonga pigeon
Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Psitt. pusullis 1790s. Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h
Red shouldered parrot 1790s. Unseen Art from Australia’s First Fleet http://wp.me/p41CQf-8h

 

Koalas in First Nations Art

Published by Content Catnip

Content Catnip is a quirky internet wunderkammer written by an Intergalactic Space Māori named Content Catnip. Join me as I meander through the quirky and curious aspects of history, indigenous spirituality, the natural world, animals, art, storytelling, books, philosophy, travel, Māori culture and loads more.

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