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  2. Brewarrina Aboriginal Fish Traps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewarrina_Aboriginal_Fish...

    The Brewarrina Aboriginal fish traps is the largest system of traditional fish traps recorded in Australia. Its unusual, innovative and complex design demonstrates the development of a highly skilled fishing technique involving a thorough understanding of dry stone wall construction principles, river hydrology and fish biology.

  3. Albany Fish Traps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albany_Fish_Traps

    The Albany Fish Traps, also known as the Oyster Harbour Fish Traps, are a series of fish traps situated in Oyster Harbour near the mouth of the Kalgan River approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi) east of Albany in the Great Southern region of Western Australia . The traps were constructed by the Menang peoples and are over 7,500 years old. [ 1]

  4. Fish trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_trap

    A fish trap is a trap used for catching fish and other aquatic animals of value. Fish traps include fishing weirs, cage traps, fish wheels and some fishing net rigs such as fyke nets. [ 1 ] The use of traps are culturally almost universal around the world and seem to have been independently invented many times.

  5. Budj Bim heritage areas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budj_Bim_heritage_areas

    The Tyrendarra lava flow changed the drainage pattern of the region, and created large wetlands. [1] From some thousands of years before European settlement in the area in the early 19th century (one of five eel trap systems at Lake Condah has been carbon dated to 6,600 years old [1]), the Gunditjmara clans had developed a system of aquaculture which channelled the water of the Darlot Creek ...

  6. Pindjarup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pindjarup

    As a people of the wetlands, the Pindjarup were famed for their fish-traps, and a seasonal cycle of six seasons, making full use of the environmental resources from the coastal estuaries and sand-dunes, through the interior lakes and wetlands to the more fertile soils of the Darling Scarp foothills and ridgelines.

  7. Tsimshian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsimshian

    The traps were used to gather fish for food for people living on the reservation. Legally the community was required to use the traps at least once every three years or lose the right permanently. They stopped the practice early in the 2000s and lost their right to this traditional way of fishing.

  8. Yuwibara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuwibara

    Yuwibara. The Yuwibara, also written Yuibera and Juipera and also known as Yuwi, after their language, are an Aboriginal Australian people, originating from the area around present-day Mackay, on the east coast of Queensland, Australia. [1][2] Traditional lands of various Australian Aboriginal tribes around Gladstone.

  9. Brewarrina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewarrina

    Brewarrina's most significant feature is its Aboriginal fish traps. Known in the local Aboriginal language as Baiame's Ngunnhu. It is believed that Ngemba, Wonkamurra, Wailwan and Gomolaroi people have shared and maintained the traps for thousands of years. The age of the fish traps is currently unknown, but they may be the oldest human ...

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