Synopses & Reviews
Eminent biologist Sir Baldwin Spencer (1860-1929) was born in Lancashire but moved to Australia to take up the chair in biology at the University of Melbourne in 1887. As a member of the 1894 Horn Scientific Expedition to Central Australia, Spencer made the acquaintance of F. J. Gillen, an advocate of Aboriginal rights, with whom he later formed a working partnership. Spencer and Gillen returned to Alice Springs in Central Australia in 1896-1897, to carry out observations on the local Aboriginal tribe, the Arunta. These observations were published in 1899, in The Native Tribes of Central Australia (also reissued in this series), which represented the most comprehensive study of Aboriginal customs. Gillen and Spencer continued to undertake fieldwork until 1903. Volume 2 of Across Australia (published in two volumes in 1912) describes Aboriginal tribes of the present-day Northern Territory, between Alice Springs and the Gulf of Carpentaria.
Synopsis
Fieldwork on the Aborigines of Central Australia by Spencer and Gillen was published in two volumes in 1912.
Synopsis
British-born biologist Sir Baldwin Spencer, and his fieldwork partner, F. J. Gillen, an advocate of Aboriginal rights, carried out innovative in-depth studies on the native tribes of Central Australia. In Volume 2, they describe the Aboriginal tribes residing in the present-day Northern Territory.
Table of Contents
10. Sacred ceremonies of the Arunta tribe; 11. Atninga or avenging party; 12. Alice Springs to Barrow Creek; 13. Barrow Creek and the Kaitish and Unmatjera tribes; 14. Magic; 15. Barrow Creek to Tennant Creek; 16. Life in the Warramunga camp; 17. The Great Wollunqua; 18. Fire ceremony of the Warramunga tribe; 19. Death, mourning and burial ceremonies of the Warramunga tribe; 20. Tennant Creek to Powell Creek; 21. From Powell Creek to the Gulf of Carpentaria; 22. Borroloola and the coastal tribes; Appendix; Index.