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Kalaako

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See also: Kalaako language

The Kalaako (Kalarko) were an Aboriginal Australian people of the Goldfields-Esperance region of Western Australia.

Country

Norman Tindale assigned the Kalaako tribe a reach extending over 24,000 square miles (62,000 km), running up north from Green Patch and Scaddan to beyond Widgemooltha. It takes in Mount Monger, Golden Ridge, and Burbanks. Their eastern boundary lies some 15 miles (24 km) west of Fraser Range, at a site mined for red ochre, known in the native language as Karkanja. Their western frontier is around the Bremer Range. The Johnston Lakes, Mount Holland, Barker Lake, Koongornin, Norseman and Salmon Gums all lie on what is Kalaako territory.

The tribes neighbouring the Kalaako are, clockwise from the north, the Maduwongga, the Tjeraridjal (n.e.), the Ngadjunmaia, the Njunga due south; the Wudjari, the Njakinjaki, and the Kalamaia to the northeast.

Alternative names

Source: Tindale 1974, p. 243

Notes

Citations

  1. Tindale 1974, p. 243.
  2. TTB 2016.
  3. AIATSIS.

Sources

Aboriginal peoples of Western Australia
Peoples
History
By state or territory
New South Wales
Northern Territory
Queensland
South Australia
Tasmania
Victoria
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