Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels

Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels Indigenous Australian Aborigines created coolamons as carrying vessels that come in many forms. Australian Abor...
Coolamons and Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels
Coolamons and Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels
Australian Aboriginal Food
A Tour of Australian Aboriginal Artifacts and Stories

Australian Museum - Coolamons - Aboriginal Carrying Vessels

Indigenous Australian Aborigines created coolamons as carrying vessels that come in many forms. Australian Aboriginal carrying vessels were a multi-purpose shallow vessel or dish with curved sides or containers made from wood, weaving, or animal skins.

Coolamons were used for winnowing grains in the traditional bread-making process. They were also used for general heating and cooking vessel.

Above is a Bark Water Holder from Flinders Island, Queensland, and was acquired in 1905 by the Museum.

This container was made from the bark shell of a knot formed on a eucalyptus tree trunk. The inside of the eucalyptus tree knot was then burnt and smoothed with stone and shells.

The Coiled Reed basket was acquired in 1937 from Tambo, central-west Queensland. The Paperback Coolamon was obtained from Western New South Wales.

Coolamons were traditionally used by Aboriginal women to carry water, fruits, nuts, as well as to cradle babies.

Coolamons were often carried on the head when traveling or under the arm as a cradle.

If carried on the head, a ring pad, called ‘akartne’ in Arrernte Aboriginal language, was placed on the head, made out of possum or human hair string, twisted grass or feathers to help support the carriage of the coolamon.

Coolamons and Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels

  • Artifact:         Bark Water Carrier (top left)
  • Material:       Wood
  • Location:       Flinders Island, Queensland
  • Acquired:      1905
  • Museum:      Australian Museum
  •  
  • Artifact:         Coiled Reed Basket (top right)
  • Material:       Plant Material
  • Location:       Tambo, Queensland
  • Acquired:      1937
  • Museum:      Australian Museum
  • Artifact:        Paperbark Coolamon (item on bottom)
  • Material:       Paperbark, plant fiber
  • Location:       Western New South Wales
  • Acquired:      1998
  • Museum:     Australian Museum

Australian Museum - Coolamons - Aboriginal Carrying Vessels

Tanned Kangaroo Skin Water Bag, 1893 and a Shallow Wooden Coolamon

Above is shown a Tanned Kangaroo Skin Water Bag, which was made with Coolibah gum and plant fiber and was used for carrying water over long distances.

This aboriginal artifact was acquired in 1893 from the Urania people at the Toko Waterhole, Toko Range, and Gorge in north-west Queensland.

Coolamons and Australian Aboriginal Carrying Vessels

  • Artifact:        Shallow Coolamon (bottom photo, the article on the bottom left)
  • Material:       Wood
  • Location:       Western New South Wales
  • Acquired:     1990
  • Museum:     Australian Museum
  • Artifact:       Tanned Kangaroo Skin Water Bag (bottom picture, the item on the top)
  • Material:      Kangaroo Skin, fabric, plant fiber string
  • Location:     Toko Waterhole, Toko Range and Gorge in north-west Queensland
  • Acquired:    1893
  • Museum:     Australian Museum

Australian Aboriginal Indigenous

Australian Aboriginal Food

Aboriginal Australians were limited to the range of foods occurring naturally in their area, but they knew exactly when, where, and how to find everything edible.

Anthropologists and nutrition experts who have studied the tribal diet in Arnhem Land found it to be well-balanced, with most of the nutrients modern dietitians recommend.

Both men and women had to spend from half to two-thirds of each day hunting or foraging for food.

Each day, the women of the group went into successive parts of one countryside with wooden digging sticks and plaited dilly bags or wooden coolamons.

Larger animals and birds, such as kangaroos and emus, were speared or disabled with a thrown club, boomerang, or stone.

Many Indigenous hunting devices were used to get within striking distance of prey.

The men were excellent trackers and stalkers, approaching their prey running where there was the cover, or ‘freezing’ and crawling when in the open.

They were careful to stay downwind and sometimes covered themselves with mud to disguise their smell.

The typical Aboriginal diet included a wide variety of foods, such as kangaroo, emu, wombats, goanna, snakes, birds, many insects such as honey ants, Bogong moths, and witchetty grubs.

Many varieties of plant foods such as taro, coconuts, nuts, fruits, and berries were also eaten.

What Aboriginal knowledge can teach us about happiness

A Tour of Australian Aboriginal Artifacts and Stories

  • Australian Museums
  • Coolamons and Aboriginal Carrying Vessels
  • Aboriginal Shields
  • Australian Aboriginal Shields
  • Woureddy, an Aboriginal Chief of Van Diemen’s Land
  • Trucaninny, wife of Woureddy
  • Aboriginal Message Stick
  • Platypus Nest
  • Thylacine Skeleton (Tasmanian Tiger)
  • Mummified Thylacine Head
  • Aboriginal King Plate of Billie Hippie
  • Australian Aboriginal Sayings and Quotes
  • Bedgi-Bedgi
  • Australian Native Police Uniform
  • A Book of Drawings by Tommy McRae
  • “View taken from the spot – Bateman’s Hill” by George Alexander Gilbert

The myth of Aboriginal stories being myths

A real history of Aboriginal Australians

~~~

“We are all visitors to this time, this place.
We are just passing through.
Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love…
and then we return home.”
– Australian Aboriginal saying

~~~

Photo Credit: GM

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4 July 2020, 13:56 | Views: 7231

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