Australian Aborigines are Australoid. While they may resemble Africans in their skin colour, they are actually VERY different from them, perhaps even more so than Caucasians are. The DNA of Australian Aborigines is closest to that of many of the people of the Indian sub-continent.
Mostly nonnative Caucasian Austrailians. The oldest inhabitants are called aborigines by everyone except aborigines. They identify themselves by group names that reflect language, ancestry and/or home territory. There are dozens of names.
No one actually knows what race aboriginal Australians are but most people think that they are white. Others think they look a tiny bit hispanic but most aboriginals that still live today look a bit tanned and some of them are black. It's a coincident.
they were black people who fought for the rights bascily this history was repeted i thing thats right
Australoid.
Australian aborigines belong to the Australoid race. Australoid peoples ranged throughout Indonesia, Malaysia, Australia, New Guinea, Melanesia, the Andaman Islands, the Indian subcontinent, as well as parts of the Middle East.
As a race, the Australian Aborigines were not (and are not) cannibals. However, in 1858, explorer Augustus Gregory found evidence of cannibalism among the indigenous Australians, noting near a campfire in western Australia "bones of a full-grown native that had been cooked".
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd officially apologised to the Stolen Generations of Australian Aborigines on 13 February 2008.
Australian Aborigines are not a civilization, they are a people native to the Australian mainland including the island of Tasmania. It is widely believed that the first Aborigines migrated to Australia over 40,000 years ago.
The Australian aborigines
Kangaroo was a popular food for the Australian Aborigines anywhere on the mainland.
Despite their appearance, Australian Aborigines are not directly related to Africans.
Australian Aborigines
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's national apology to the Stolen Generations of Australian Aborigines occurred on 13 February 2008.
There are no longer any Australian indigenous people (Aborigines) living a traditional native lifestyle in Australian rainforests.
Judith Wright.
Today, Australian Aborigines live in the towns and outskirts, and in the Eastern states of Australia. They comprise around 3 percent of Australia's population.