In one Aboriginal dreamtime story, the echidna-man attacked the lubra (wife) of another man. The tribe turned on him, attacking him with spears, and he was driven out of camp with numerous spears sticking out of his back. He crawled away into a cave to nurse his wounds, and eventually emerged as an echidna, with spines sticking out of him.
dreamtime is when they tell bedtime stories
The echidna's spikes are called spines.
dreamtime
hello
The correct name for the echidna's spikes is 'spines'. The echidna's spines grow up to 50 mm (5 cm) in length.
Traditional Aboriginal paintings tell stories from the Dreamtime - when and how the world was created.
dreamtime
Yes
This was the Rainbow Serpent.
wombat dreaming
The Aboriginal Dreamtime stories told of the time of Creation, when animals became what they are today and landscapes took on their current form.
No they are fake, But to aboriginal people they are important Don't go down the road saying "Dreamtime Stories are fake"