Sustainable lifestyle, or sustainable development, or sustainability.
Sustainable living.Green lifestyle.
aboriginal art started in the dream-time by indigenous Australian's drawing/painting there culture/lifestyle.
Because it tells stories and tells us the life the Aboriginal people had.
The main features of the aboriginal day of mourning was there stolen generation. they saw Australia day as a day of the Europeans taking over there lands and stealing there lifestyle
In 1984, the Pintupi Nine, the last uncontacted aboriginal tribe in Australia, were located by some aboriginal trackers in the Northern Territory. They were the last group to live a traditional hunter-gatherer lifestyle, surviving in the Gibson Desert.
Scientists and researchers in Antarctica live a lifestyle that is supported by their government. This lifestyle includes the import of everything consumed and used and the export of everything wasted and expired. There is no 'sustainability' in Antarctica such as is expected on more productive continents.
Any sustainable living is a lifestyle that attempts to reduce an individuals use of the Earth's natural resources and his/her own resources. (any lifestyle based on energy-saving and environmental responsibility.) Examples- using cloth shopping bags, driving less and walking more, buying locally grown food, and RECYCLING!!!!
No: there are no longer any nomadic indigenous people in Australia. No aboriginal people live a truly traditional lifestyle anymore.
One of the most common negative opinions about indigenous Australians is that they are lazy. This is a generalised statement based on European values, and not on what is important to the aboriginal people. The traditional aboriginal lifestyle could not have been maintained as it was if the Aborigines were lazy.
Some aboriginal groups historically practiced hunter-gatherer lifestyles, relying on hunting, fishing, and foraging for food. However, not all aboriginal groups followed this lifestyle, as their ways of life varied based on their specific environment and traditions.
New South Wales - 148,200 Queensland - 146,400 Western Australia - 77,900 Northern Territory - 66,600 Victoria - 30,800 South Australia - 26,000 Tasmania - 16,900 Australian Capital Territory - 4,000 While all Australian Aborigines identify with a particular tribe, the only remaining aboriginal tribes are in the Northern Territory of Australia, parts of Western Australia and the far north of South Australia. None of these tribes still live a traditional lifestyle, but a semi-traditional lifestyle integrated strongly with European culture. The states each have their aboriginal people, but these people do not live even a semi-traditional lifestyle.