Yes, but there are different shades of ochre. There is red ochre, orange ochre and yellow ochre, for example.
http://www.aboriginalartshop.com/Ochre/ochre-aboriginal-art.html
ochre is used with Marzia
on ceremonies and more
This flag symbolises Aboriginal identity. Yellow represents the sun (giver of life) and yellow ochre. Red represents the red earth (the relationship to the land) and the red ochre used in ceremonies. Black represents the Aboriginal people.
yes very popular because you can tell stories and painting with them
They dig up dirt from da ground
Wikipeda tells us: Traditionally, paints were often made from water, animal fats or spittle mixed with ochre and other rock pigments and sometimes had vegetable fibers added. Aboriginal art online says: painted fragment yielded ochre, burnt bone, stone artefacts and charcoal. For more of this article, visit: http://www.aboriginalartonline.com/art/rockage.php
The color ochre looks like an earthy, yellow mustard. Dried clay is also combined with a painting medium, producing a reddish or rusty brown version of ochre.
Aboriginal tribes would use materials from the earth to paint with. They would grind ochre and use different clays to use as paint. .
orange ochre
Solution
Ochre is a warm yellow-brown color. It is often described as a mixture of yellow and orange with earthy undertones.