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Aboriginal Australians did not have maps as we know them
Maps differ from photographs in many significant ways, including the use of imaginary lines or boundaries.
There are some 200 aboriginal dialects in Australia. Each will have its own word for "journey", and that will differ according to the nature of the journey.The aboriginal-English word commonly used for a journey is walkabout.
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the dots in aboriginal art mean pathways and can sometimes symbolise people, the aboriginals used these as maps to find food and water, these were made on rocks by die and such like
European musical instruments are far more sophisticated then anything the aboriginals had. Aboriginal music was very much limited to percussion didgeridoo and singers.
They are like maps because they are painted from a top view like maps and also they usually show some sort of journey that either a person or animals took. They show the path/ trail that the animals took.
Google Maps and Yahoo Maps are both very similar. They both give driving instructions and show maps of an area. The main difference is the layout of the site and the search results of locations.
Topographic maps show topography. Topography is the height and dimensions of a land mass above water, conversely bythmetery is know as water topography. Geologic maps show geological feature of a land mass such as vegetation and climate zones.
The name 'wombat' has no other meaning in the aboriginal dialect. It is derived from an Eora name for the animal.
it is not actually not given on maps and the other name for Myanmar is Burma!
how does the thai musical essemble differ from each other