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  2. First Nations Australian traditional custodianship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Nations_Australian...

    First Nations Australians have expressed their interpretations of traditional custodianship through academic writing, political advocacy, traditional stories, poetry and music. Numerous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures share an understanding that, contrary to Western views on land ownership, the land "owns us".

  3. Nisiotika - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisiotika

    Nisiotika (Greek: νησιώτικα, meaning "insular (songs)") are the songs and dances of the Aegean islands with a variety of styles. [1] Outside of Greece, it is played in the diaspora in countries such as Turkey, Australia, the United States and elsewhere.

  4. Wagait Beach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wagait_Beach

    Wagait Beach is a locality approximately 8 km west of Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia, on the opposite side of the harbour. It makes up the Wagait Shire local government area. The population was 422 in 2021. [2] Wagait Beach is not part of Darwin, but many of its residents use the Mandorah ferry to travel to work in Darwin.

  5. Lake Bolac stone arrangement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Bolac_stone_arrangement

    The Lake Bolac Eel Festival is a community music and art festival held each autumn on the foreshore of Lake Bolac since 2004, inspired by the fact that Lake Bolac was a traditional gathering place for Indigenous people before white settlement. [10] This festival has helped to make the site well-known to both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people ...

  6. Music of Polynesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Polynesia

    Kalani Pe'a Merrie Monarch 2019. Popular music in Polynesia is a mixture of more traditional music made with indigenous instruments such as the nose flute in Tonga, and the distinctive wooden drums of the Rarotonga, and local artists creating music with contemporary instruments and rhythms, and also a blend of both.

  7. Music and dances of the Federated States of Micronesia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_and_dances_of_the...

    Chuuk shares many of the similar dance styles with Yap because of similar cultural heritage with Chuuk and the outer islands of Yap. Chuuk's most mysterious and rarest dance is called the "Moonlight Dance", one of the few dances in which both men and women dance together. It can only happen during a full moon with permission of the village chief.

  8. Music of the Cook Islands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_the_Cook_Islands

    One unique quality of Polynesian music (it has become almost a cliché) is the use of the sustained 6th chord in vocal music, though typically the 6th chord is not used in religious music. Traditional songs and hymns are referred to as imene metua (lit. hymn of the parent/ancestor). Traditional dance is the most prominent art form of the Cook ...

  9. Culture of Nauru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Nauru

    The language of Nauru, Dorerin Naoero, is a Micronesian language.English is understood and spoken widely. Education is compulsory from 4 to 16, in all the schools on the island. The University of the South Pacific has a centre in Nauru located in the Aiwo District and offers pre-school teacher education, nutrition and disability studies and will offer the Community Workers Cer