Abstract

Nyoongar people have lived in the South West of Western Australia for at least 50,000 years. During that time, they experienced significant climate change, including wide variations in temperature and rainfall, and hundreds of metres’ difference in sea levels. Nyoongar people have a long memory, and climate change is described in their stories and in the knowledge they hold about how life was lived in earlier times. There are artifacts and places that have been manipulated to be productive despite severe drought. COVID-19 disrupted the writing of this article, and the authors felt it appropriate to include Nyoongar responses to the threat of epidemic disease brought by Europeans early in their settlement of the area. This review collates existing material generated through Koodjal Jinnung (two-way seeing), a research method that incorporates traditional knowledge and contemporary social and natural sciences about Nyoongar history, to create a description of the resiliency of Nyoongar people under threat from climate change. The article identifies key values and resilience factors underpinning the successful implementation of behavioural and technological mechanisms to negotiate severe climate change and the threat of epidemic disease.

Highlights

  • Nyoongar people have lived in the South West of Western Australia for at least 50,000 years

  • Nyoongar people are the Aboriginal inhabitants of the southwestern corner of the state of Western Australia (WA)

  • This review of Nyoongar history shows that Nyoongar people were continuously on their boodja for at least 48,000 years, and that during that time they experienced significant climate change and massive fluctuations in sea levels

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Summary

Introduction

Nyoongar people have lived in the South West of Western Australia for at least 50,000 years. Nyoongar people experienced a stable ecology for the first 15,000 years of occupation and a gradual drying and cooling period leading to 10,000 years of extraordinarily severe drought and cold between 25,000 and 15,000 years ago This was followed by a relatively rapid rise in temperature and rainfall and a long stable period prior to European colonisation. Census figures from the WA government summarised in 2004 and population cohort analysis indicates that by 1868 there were just over 24,000 non-Aboriginal people in WA, with a gender imbalance of two men for every woman Those settling outside Nyoongar boodja passed through it, using ports at Kalingiri (Albany), Coombarnup (Bunbury) and Walyalup (Fremantle). The Nyoongar community was exposed to myriad diseases against which they had no immunity

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