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Landscape typical of much of
Arnhem Land
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Arnhem Land
The north-eastern corner of the Northern Territory.
Now an area controlled by the Northern Land Council and inhabited by
local Aborigines.
Arnhem Land is an area of 97 000 sq. km in the
north-eastern corner of the Northern Territory. It extends from Port
Roper on the Gulf of Carpentaria around the coast to the East Alligator
River where it adjoins Kakadu National Park. The region was named by
Matthew Flinders after the Dutch ship Arnhem which explored the coast
in 1623.
The coast has one of the longest histories of
exploration of any area in Australia. It is likely that the first
Aborigines, making their way across the Indonesian archipelago some
40-50 000 years ago, arrived on the Arnhem Land coast. Certainly by the
fifteenth century the coast was being regularly visited by Indonesian
and Malaccan sailors and traders.
In 1644 Abel Tasman sailed along the coast and in
1803 Matthew Flinders, as part of his circumnavigation of Australia,
charted the complex coastline. The inland areas were explored by Ludwig
Leichhardt, who travelled through the area on his 1844-45 journey from
Moreton Bay to Port Essington, and David Lindsay, the South Australian
surveyor, who, in 1883, was commissioned to explore the central and
eastern sections of Arnhem Land. He met with strong resistance from the
local Aborigines. At one point his party was attacked by over 300 men.
The area continued to be explored throughout the
nineteenth century but much of it was inaccessible. The northern coast,
for example, is characterised by mangrove swamps and tidal rivers.
Inland from the mangrove swamps are areas of tropical jungle, swamps
and gorges. Thus the Aborigines of the region, who have lived in Arnhem
Land for at least the last 25 000 years, tend to live near the coast
where fish are abundant and life is relatively easy. The reserve is
noted for its rich examples of rock art and Aboriginal artefacts. The
stone axes found in the reserve are some of the oldest in existence.
The first mission station was established in Arnhem
Land in 1908 by the Church Mission Society. In 1916 the Northern
Territory Administration bought Paddy Cahill's cattle station at
Oenpelli and in 1920 the 2400 sq. miles around the station were
converted into an Aboriginal reserve. At the same time the Methodist
Overseas Mission established a mission on Galiwinku. The mission at
Galiwinku, a large island 500 km from Darwin, is now one of the largest
communities in Arnhem Land with a population of over 1000 people.
In 1931, after pressure from a number of
organisations, Arnhem Land became an Aboriginal reserve. A number of
mission stations, with populations hovering around 500 people, now
exist in the area. Notable are the ones at Maningrida, Milingimbi,
Numbulwar and Yirrkala.
During World War II over 5000 servicemen were
stationed on Gove Peninsula (qv) and after the war prospectors found
vast deposits of bauxite in the area. In the early 1970s Narbarlek
prospected for uranium in the reserve and in 1979 permission was
granted to mine yellow cake.
There are a large number of books on the Aborigines of the
Northern Territory but a good starting point is People of Two Times:
The Aborigines of Australia's Northern Territory which is a 16 page
illustrated brochure available from the Northern Territory Tourist
Commission. It has a bibliography for those travellers interested in
reading further. A recommended starting point is Arnhem Land: Its
History and its People by the noted anthropologists Ronald M and
Catherine H Bernt.
Things to see:
Visiting Arnhem Land
During the dry season, and with the appropriate
documentation from the Northern Land Council, it is possible to drive
into Arnhem Land. The current attitude of the Northern Land Council to
such journeys is that there must be some reason beyond sightseeing or
simply wanting to travel around the edges of the continent.
Consequently applications to travel through Arnhem Land are not easy to
obtain. It is private property and should be respected as such.
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Hotels
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Corroboree Park Tavern
Arnhem Hwy
Arnhem Land
NT
0886
Telephone: (08) 8978 8920
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Lodges & Chalets
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Wildman River Wilderness Lodge
Point Stuart Rd
Arnhem Land
NT
0886
Telephone: (08) 8978 8920
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Caravan Parks
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Annaburroo Billabong
Arnhem Hwy
Arnhem Land
NT
0886
Telephone: (08) 8978 8971
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Corroboree Park Caravan & Camping Park
Arnhem Hwy
Arnhem Land
NT
0886
Telephone: (08) 8978 8920
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