The Karajarri are an Aboriginal Australian people, who live south-west of the Kimberleys in the northern Pilbara region,[1] predominantly between the coastal area and the Great Sandy Desert.[2] They now mostly reside at Bidyadanga, south of Broome.[3] To their north live the Yawuru people, to the east the Mangala, to the northeast the Nyigina, and to their south the Nyangumarta.[4][5] Further down the coast are the Kariera.
The Karajarri are an Aboriginal Australian people, who live south-west of the Kimberleys in the northern Pilbara region, predominantly between the coastal...
Garadjari (Karajarri, many other spellings; see below) is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Karajarri people. The language is a member of...
Indigenous Australian cultural leader and artist. He was a leader of the Karajarri people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia. As an artist, he...
In Karajarri mythology, Ngariman is a quoll-man who killed the Bagadjimbiri, two dingo spirits and sons of Dilga, an earth goddess. In revenge, she drowned...
Nyigina on the eastern hinterland, and on their southern frontier the Karajarri, The border with the latter is marked by an ecological transition from...
In Karajarri mythology, the Bagadjimbiri are two brothers and creator spirits. They arose from the ground as dingos and made water-holes, sex organs (from...
the Bardi people but also Nyulnyul, Jabirr Jabirr, Jukun, Yawuru and Karajarri people. The name derives from the boats used for pearling, known as pearling...
Plains pastoral lease, is shared between the Nyangumarta People and the Karajarri (or Garadjari) People. The two groups filed overlapping native title determination...
lived in the north-western area of the Great Sandy Desert, west of the Karajarri people, east of the Walmajarri, with the Juwaliny and Yulparija to the...
those customs. For example, according to the myths of the Australian Karajarri, the mythical Bagadjimbiri brothers established all of the Karadjeri's...
the Bardi people but also Nyulnyul, Jabirr Jabirr, Jukun, Yawuru and Karajarri people. The name derives from the boats used for pearling, known as pearling...
(Dambimangari) NOK Karajarri II 44,021 7 May 2014 18°44′27″S 121°40′03″E / 18.740818585°S 121.6674272996°E / -18.740818585; 121.6674272996 (Karajarri) DAL VI...