This article is about the Indigenous Australian group. For their language, see Worimi language. For the lands leased to NSW Parks and Wildlife, see Worimi conservation lands.
The Worimi (also spelt Warrimay) people are Aboriginal Australians from the eastern Port Stephens and Great Lakes regions of coastal New South Wales, Australia. Before contact with settlers, their people extended from Port Stephens in the south to Forster/Tuncurry in the north and as far west as Gloucester.[1][2]
The Worimi (also spelt Warrimay) people are Aboriginal Australians from the eastern Port Stephens and Great Lakes regions of coastal New South Wales, Australia...
spelt Gadjang, Kattang, Kutthung, Gadhang, Gadang and previously known as Worimi language (also spelt Warrimay), is an Australian Aboriginal language or...
826 ha (4,512-acre) Worimi National Park, 1,042 ha (2,575-acre) Worimi State Conservation Area and 1,568 ha (3,875-acre) Worimi Regional Park. Day-to-day...
Worimi is a small family of two to five mostly extinct Australian Aboriginal languages of New South Wales. Awabakal, spoken around Lake Macquarie in New...
The Worimi conservation lands are located on and adjacent to Stockton Beach in New South Wales, Australia. They were created in February 2007 when Crown...
Wales. They share a dialect continuum with the Worimi people. The Gathang language (aka Gadjang or Worimi) is the speech of the Birrbay centred in Port...
area. The Awabakal were bounded to the north–west by the Wonnarua, the Worimi to the north–east, and the Darkinung peoples to the west and south. Awaba...
served as a location for the Worimi people to gather together for ceremonies and feasts and has been of significance to Worimi people for at least 4000 years...
the resignation of Jeff McCloy, the former Lord Mayor. The Awabakal and Worimi peoples are acknowledged by council as the traditional custodians of the...
Station RAAF. This is the traditional land of the Aboriginal people of Worimi, and provides important resources such as food, medicine and shelter. Protected...
University, a Sri Lankan joint services academy The ISO 639-3 code for the Worimi language, an Australian Aboriginal language This disambiguation page lists...
were bounded to the north by the Geawegal people, to the north–east by the Worimi peoples, to the south east by the Awabakal people, to the south by the Darkinung...
The major award of the evening, the NAIDOC Person of the Year, went to Worimi man Professor Kelvin Kong, who is Australia's first Indigenous surgeon....
Kulin. Vic extinct Wolyamidi language Woldjamidi, Wol'jamidi, Wolyamidi WA Worimi language NSW extinct Worrorra language, Worora language 20 (1990 Schmidt)...
eucalyptus forest and rainforest. The word Killabakh is derived from the Worimi language meaning “blue gum”, a common local species of tree. The reserve...
Mary Ann Bugg (7 May 1834 – 22 April 1905) was a Worimi bushranger, one of two well-documented women bushrangers in mid-19th century Australia. She was...
hectares (5,580 acres). The Hunter region was inhabited by the Awabakal, Worimi, Wonnarua, Geawegal, Birrpai and Darkinjung Aboriginal tribes, although...
Tapin Tops National Park (Worimi: Dapin or Dapit) is a 110 km2 (42 sq mi) national park that is located in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales...
land that is now known as the Hunter Valley wine region. Along with the Worimi to the north and the Awabakal to the south, the Wonnarua developed a trading...
him for help in organising his research, which had been focused on the Worimi, in terms of anthropological method, since he himself had not the time to...
South Wales, Australia Geawegal: Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia Worimi: New South Wales, Australia Wonnarua: New South Wales, Australia Awabakal:...
Booti Booti National Park (Worimi: Butibuti) is a national park in New South Wales, Australia, 282 kilometres (175 mi), by road, north-north-east of Sydney...