For thousands of years spinifex grasses were utilized by Indigenous Australians, most commonly for the production of resin that was then used as a hafting adhesive. While varying levels of knowledge about this particular use are retained in Indigenous communities, museum collections serve as a valuable repository of little known information about a multitude of other uses of spinifex including ornamental, medicinal, structural and ceremonial functions. In this paper we describe the range of uses of spinifex, based on examinations of objects and photographs held in various museum collections, coupled with reviews of the ethnographic and ethnohistoric literature. This study (1) brings together disparate sources of knowledge about Indigenous u...
ABSTRACT The present work sought to study the biocultural collections made by the naturalist Richard...
Background: Magical charm plants to ensure good luck in hunting, fishing, agriculture, love and warf...
Thesis (PhD)-- Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Chemistry...
Triodia pungens, a resinous spinifex grass, is proving to be a potential future bio-resource for the...
This paper is premised on several Australian Aboriginal myths (or sacred histories) from the Georgin...
Indigenous Australians, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, have diverse relationships with plan...
Plant tissue and wooden objects are rare in the Australian archaeological record but distinctive sto...
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Documentation of Australian bush medicines is of utmost importance t...
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Documentation of Australian bush medicines is of utmost importance t...
ABSTRACT – With one of the oldest surviving cultures in the world, Australian Aboriginal people have...
Abstract: The Australian Aboriginal people have used plants as medicine and food for thousands of ye...
In Australia, as is occurring in other parts of the world (Cox 2000; Cordell 2002), Indigenous knowl...
Oceania has an extremely diverse and unique flora that includes many endemic species of restricted g...
Approximately 80% of people in developing countries rely on traditional medicine for their primary h...
The prevalence and imperative of translocations for the conservation of plant species is increasing ...
ABSTRACT The present work sought to study the biocultural collections made by the naturalist Richard...
Background: Magical charm plants to ensure good luck in hunting, fishing, agriculture, love and warf...
Thesis (PhD)-- Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Chemistry...
Triodia pungens, a resinous spinifex grass, is proving to be a potential future bio-resource for the...
This paper is premised on several Australian Aboriginal myths (or sacred histories) from the Georgin...
Indigenous Australians, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, have diverse relationships with plan...
Plant tissue and wooden objects are rare in the Australian archaeological record but distinctive sto...
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Documentation of Australian bush medicines is of utmost importance t...
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Documentation of Australian bush medicines is of utmost importance t...
ABSTRACT – With one of the oldest surviving cultures in the world, Australian Aboriginal people have...
Abstract: The Australian Aboriginal people have used plants as medicine and food for thousands of ye...
In Australia, as is occurring in other parts of the world (Cox 2000; Cordell 2002), Indigenous knowl...
Oceania has an extremely diverse and unique flora that includes many endemic species of restricted g...
Approximately 80% of people in developing countries rely on traditional medicine for their primary h...
The prevalence and imperative of translocations for the conservation of plant species is increasing ...
ABSTRACT The present work sought to study the biocultural collections made by the naturalist Richard...
Background: Magical charm plants to ensure good luck in hunting, fishing, agriculture, love and warf...
Thesis (PhD)-- Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Dept. of Chemistry...