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Aboriginal People and European Settlement. SS6H4: Explain the impact of English colonization on current Aboriginal basic rights, health, literacy, and language. Original Owners of Uluru and keeping traditions alive.
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Aboriginal People and European Settlement SS6H4: Explain the impact of English colonization on current Aboriginal basic rights, health, literacy, and language.
Original Owners of Uluru and keeping traditions alive • The Anangupeople are the traditional owners of Uluru and the surrounding lands. • They believe it's their job to protect this sacred place. • When European explorers saw Uluru around 150 years ago, they claimed ownership of it and renamed it Ayers Rock. • Click here to watch about the Anangu. • Click here to watch how traditions are kept alive.
Who are the Aborigines? • The Aborigines, Australia’s original human inhabitants, migrated to the continent around 40,000 to 60, 000 years ago. • The Aborigines had a nomadic hunter-gatherer way of life. • They created the earliest boomerangs, digeridoos, as well as a primitive form of rock art.
European contact Even though there was European contact with Australia in 1606, Captain James Cook of England in1770 claimed the continent for the British Crown. • The first British colony in Australia was established at Botany Bay, near present-day Sydney. • Superior weaponry and spreading of disease, like smallpox decimated the Aboriginal population.
SmallPox • Smallpox was one of the most deadly diseases in history, let alone Australia. • Smallpox was a new disease which Aborigines had no protection from. • It is estimated that over half of the indigenous people of Australia died due to smallpox.
Why Australia? • James Cook claimed Australia in After the American Independence, Britain had to send their prisoners somewhere. • Britain began to send them to New South Wales. • Australia remained a prison colony until 1868.
Aborignial way of life • After European contact, Aboriginal way of life was changed forever. • Once the dominant people of Australia, the Aborigines today account for less than 3% of the total population. • English has become the dominant language of the continent; only around 48,000 people speak an indigenous language in Australia today. • Aboriginal peoples were not granted voting rights until 1965 and were not even counted as part of the national census until 1967
Quality of life for current aborigines • Aboriginal life expectancy is, on average, ten years lower than for non-Aborigines. • They suffer higher levels of crime, health problems, literacy rate, and educational under-achievement. • It is getting better, but it is still a struggle which is why Australia has a national Sorry Day.