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Malyangapa
Introduction
Native Title Recognition Set for Two of the Oldest Claims in SA
Mutawintji Lands Plan of Management
Koch SHLP Presentation
What's in a Name? a Typological and Phylogenetic
A Needs-Based Review of the Status of Indigenous Languages in South Australia
Skin, Kin and Clan: the Dynamics of Social Categories in Indigenous
An Invitation to Contribute to a Forthcoming Series of Articles on ‘Aboriginal Historiography’
South Australia Native Title Claim
Modeling in Historical Linguistics: Trisecting Computational Methods, Speech Communities, and Language Change1
Federal Court of Australia
Development of a Learner's Grammar for Paakantyi
Death Procedures
National Indigenous Languages Survey Report 2005 National Indigenous Languages Survey Report 2005
Aboriginal Placenames
Identifying Data Sources Available to Support Multiple Cultural Values Associated with Water Assets
Download Map (Pdf)
Guide to Sound Recordings Collected by Luise Hercus, 1965-1970
Top View
Countering Aboriginal Nguages
Barkandji Native Title and Fishing
CLASSIFICATION of LAKE EYRE LANGUAGES Peter Austin 1
THE TWO RAINBOW SERPENTS TRAVELLING: Mura Track Narratives from the ‘Corner Country’
Guide to Sound Recordings Collected by Stephen Wurm
Aboriginal Placenames: Naming and Re-Naming the Australian
SAHMRI Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Protocols Document
Supplementary Materials “Computational Phylogenetics and the Internal Structure of Pama-Nyungan”
Moiety Names in South-Eastern Australia: Distribution and Reconstructed History Harold Koch, Luise Hercus and Piers Kelly
Introduction 1
Aboriginal People and Culture Handbook the Artwork Throughout the Aboriginal People and Culture Handbook Is by Kristien Smith
Geographical Names in the Two Ngatyi Stories 3 3.1
Non-Configurationality in Australian Aboriginal Languages Author(S): Peter Austin and Joan Bresnan Source: Natural Language & Linguistic Theory , May, 1996, Vol
THE TWO RAINBOW SERPENTS TRAVELLING: Mura Track Narratives from the ‘Corner Country’
Preferred Statements of Acknowledgement
Iga—The Tree That Walked