Misplaced Pages

Koamu

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Koamu ( Guwamu ) were an indigenous Australian people of the state of Queensland .

#633366

3-622: The Koamu language , often classified as a dialect of Bidjara , appeared to be quite similar to that spoken by the Ualarai , and some early ethnographers such as R. H. Mathews confused the two for this reason. The Koamu are estimated to have ranged over 6,000 square miles (16,000 km) of tribal territory. They were on the Balonne River starting south of St. George , as far as Angledool , Hebei, and Brenda. Their western terrain extended to Bollon and Nebine Creek . Dirranbandi also

6-537: Was fashioned by a bat, which gummed on some cockatoo feathers to a sticky milky weed, which immediately took wing, and flew right down to Koamu territory, with the bat in hot pursuit, until it won sanctuary in a cave called Ungwari. The Koamu undertook rituals in this cavern to secure the increase of bees in their area. The descendants of the Koamu, under the name the Kooma people, had their native title rights recognized by

9-461: Was part of their territory. According to Thomas Honery, an authority on the nearby Weilwan , the Koamu also lived around the Warrego . This was rejected by Norman Tindale as beyond their western frontier. On dying, a Koamu is met on passing into the spirit world by his yuri or totem , who then reintroduces him to all of his relations, the natural species belonging to his moiety . The first bee

#633366