Zichar
Senior Member
i enjoy this thread alot
Ah thanks for dropping by! I've been behind some of the uploads. I look, think, dream and before I know it, I've run out of time to process and post

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No more walking said she who must be obeyed
So we drove around the rock, stopping at points of interest, carvings and paintings
Mt Augustus lie within the lands of the Wadjari tribe and is known to them as Burringurrah
The story of its origin is admittedly, mysterious and enchanting:
An excerpt from the Dept of Environment and Conservation's brochure
The Burringurrah story
In the Dreaming, a boy called Burringurrah was undergoing his initiation into manhood. The rigours of this process so distressed him that he ran away, thereby breaking Aboriginal law. Tribesmen pursued the boy, finally catching up with him and spearing him in the upper right leg as his punishment.
Burringurrah fell to the ground; the spearhead broke from its shaft and protruded from his leg. The boy tried to crawl away but was hit with a mulgurrah (fighting stick).
Burringurrah collapsed and died, lying on his belly with his left leg bent up beside his body. You can see his final resting pose when you approach Mount Augustus from the south.
The geological fracture lines at the western end of the mount indicate the wounds inflicted by the mulgurrah. Look for the spear stump in his leg that today is called Edneys Lookout.
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