The Kurajarra were an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

Their existence as a people was overlooked in Norman Tindale's classic 1974 survey of Australian Aboriginal tribal groups and their language is unattested.

Country

The Kurajarra were a small tribe whose territorial extension is not known other than that its heartland lay in the McKay Range (Pungkulyi) some 48 kilometres (30 mi) northwest of Kumpupintil Lake.[1] They lived between the Nyiyaparli to their west, the Wanman to the north, the Kartudjara on their eastern and southeastern side, and the Putidjara to the south.[2]

People

Like the Ngulipartu, the Kurajarra were a numerically small tribe which, under the stress of post-contact migrations and change, diminished rapidly, with many of them being absorbed into neighbouring tribes through intermarriage. Writing in 1989, Tonkinson stated that only a handful of descendants survived from the original tribe.[3]

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ Tonkinson 1989, pp. 106–107.
  2. ^ Tonkinson 1989, p. 106.
  3. ^ Tonkinson 1989, p. 107.

Sources

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