Spears and boomerangs.
No they had spears and boomerangs
they used boomerangs for hunting kangaroos and emus.
they used their willy tips.
They use boomerang and womera and all sorts of stuff
the australian aboriginals didn't have good weapons to defeat the europeans, the australian aboriginals only have boomerangs and aeros for weapons, and the european have guns. so the europeans won the war.
hunting kangaroos or other animals used by the aboriginals, they threw it and i think it chopped the animalshead off and came back to them
the boomerang started as a stick aboriginals used to use to hunt, and a hunter accidentaly made a returning boomerang. modern boomerangs are made of stronger materials and can fly over 200 yards.
Boomerangs were important for a number of reasons. In the hands of traditional indigenous Australians, boomerangs had a number of uses. Hunting boomerangs came in two forms. One form was non-returning, and these boomerangs were thrown with force at an animal, usually at its legs so that it was temporarily disabled, then killed with a spear. The other form was returning, and these boomerangs were used for herding birds or animals towards a particular location where they could then be caught easily. Boomerangs were also used in ceremonies and corroborees. Such ceremonial boomerangs had a significant role in retelling of the aboriginal 'Dreamtime' stories, and were painted in such a way as to render the main details of an event. These paintings were then rubbed off after the ceremony or corroboree, and reused on another occasion. These boomerangs might also be used as clap-sticks around a campfire. Boomerangs could be a practical tool, often used by the women as digging sticks.
Yes
aboriginals use paint brushes to paint
stones and boomerangs and stuff