The Karieri people (alternatively Karimera; Gariera; Kaierra; Kariera; Karriara; Karriarra; or Kyreara) were an
Indigenous Australian people
Indigenous Australians or Australian First Nations are people with familial heritage from, and membership in, the ethnic groups that lived in Australia before British colonisation. They consist of two distinct groups: the Aboriginal peoples ...
of the
Pilbara
The Pilbara () is a large, dry, thinly populated region in the north of Western Australia. It is known for its Aboriginal peoples; its ancient landscapes; the red earth; and its vast mineral deposits, in particular iron ore. It is also a glo ...
, who once lived around the coastal and inland area around and east of
Port Hedland
A port is a maritime facility comprising one or more wharves or loading areas, where ships load and discharge cargo and passengers. Although usually situated on a sea coast or estuary, ports can also be found far inland, such as Ham ...
.
Country
According to
Norman Tindale
Norman Barnett Tindale AO (12 October 1900 – 19 November 1993) was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist.
Life
Tindale was born in Perth, Western Australia in 1900. His family moved to Tokyo and lived ther ...
the Kariera/Karimera people held sway over some of tribal land and were centereds round the Peeawah,
Yule
Yule, actually Yuletide ("Yule time") is a festival observed by the historical Germanic peoples, later undergoing Christianised reformulation resulting in the now better-known Christmastide. The earliest references to Yule are by way of indig ...
, and
Turner
Turner may refer to:
People and fictional characters
*Turner (surname), a common surname, including a list of people and fictional characters with the name
* Turner (given name), a list of people with the given name
*One who uses a lathe for turni ...
rivers, as far as Port Hedland. Their western boundary ran to the scarp of the Hamersley tableland at the Yule river's headwaters. Their land took in the Mungaroon Range, the area north of
Wodgina
The Wodgina mine is an exhausted iron ore mine located in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, 90 kilometres south of Port Hedland.
The mine was operated by Atlas Iron Limited. The facilities and tenements are shared, by contract, with Glo ...
, at
Yandeyarra. Their eastern frontier ran along a line connecting McPhee Hill, Tabba Tabba Homestead, and the mouth o
Petermarer Creek
Their neighbours were the
Nyamal Pundju to the east and, running clockwise, the
Yindjibarndi
The Yindjibarndi are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia. They form the majority of Aboriginal people around Roebourne (the Millstream area). Their traditional lands lie around the Fortescue River.
Langua ...
, and the
Ngarluma
The Ngarluma are an Indigenous Australian people of the western Pilbara area of northwest Australia. They are coastal dwellers of the area around Roebourne and Karratha. Not including Millstream.
Language
The Ngarluma language belongs to the ...
on their western flank.
History
With the arrival of white settlers, disease decimated most of the Kariera/Karimeras while a host of them migrated into mainland Southern Africa, especially tracing up to Tete and Sena. By the late first decade of the 1900s, the Kariera/Karimera tribal system had almost disintegrated in their original homeland Australia, the oldest informant in one case being the last member of his clan. A hundred at that time lived on and around the
sheep station
A sheep station is a large property ( station, the equivalent of a ranch) in Australia or New Zealand, whose main activity is the raising of sheep for their wool and/or meat. In Australia, sheep stations are usually in the south-east or sout ...
s that had been established on their land. Meanwhile, migrated Karieras/Karimeras had formed a great nation in Mozambique and became significantly known as the Tete people among other emerging names. Further inland into Zimbabwe, this tribe established the Mutambara Dynasty which easily traces its origins to Tete and Sena, holding similar tribal symbols as the Kariera/Karimera of Australia, including similar feral mammals (e.g. wild dog, wild cat, kangaroo etc.) as their totems.
Ecology
The Kariera/Karimera lands ran along the coast from a point east of the
Sherlock river to Port Hedland and inland, for about 50 miles over the
De Grey area and the
Yule
Yule, actually Yuletide ("Yule time") is a festival observed by the historical Germanic peoples, later undergoing Christianised reformulation resulting in the now better-known Christmastide. The earliest references to Yule are by way of indig ...
and
Turner
Turner may refer to:
People and fictional characters
*Turner (surname), a common surname, including a list of people and fictional characters with the name
* Turner (given name), a list of people with the given name
*One who uses a lathe for turni ...
rivers. In terms of tribal topography, the
Ngarla
The Ngarla are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
Country
Norman Tindale estimated their territory, to the west of Port Hedland, at around , describing it as lying along the coast to the west of Solitar ...
lay east, th
Ngarlumato their west, while the
Yindjibarndi
The Yindjibarndi are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia. They form the majority of Aboriginal people around Roebourne (the Millstream area). Their traditional lands lie around the Fortescue River.
Langua ...
and
Nyamal
The Nyamal are an Indigenous Australian, Indigenous Australian people of the Pilbara area of north-western Western Australia.
Language
A version of Nyamal language, Nyamal became the basis of a pidgin used among workers on pearling luggers in th ...
dwelt respectively up to their southern and south-eastern frontiers, encompassing an area of around 3,400-.
Much of the traditional Kariera/Karimera landscape, marked by
aboriginal rock art
Indigenous Australian art includes art made by Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander peoples, including collaborations with others. It includes works in a wide range of media including painting on leaves, bark painting, wood carvin ...
, of which several examples have been discovered from Port Hedland into the interior, was inscribed in the 'Minyiburu'
songline
A songline, also called dreaming track, is one of the paths across the land (or sometimes the sky) within the animist belief systems of the Aboriginal cultures of Australia which mark the route followed by localised "creator-beings" in the Dre ...
, which was only recorded as late as 1977 by Kingsley Palmer.
Kinship and social organization
Radcliffe-Brown's analysis of their kinship structure was drawn, perhaps with the assistance of earlier notes made by
Daisy Bates, and it was intended as challenging some key premises of
Émile Durkheim
David Émile Durkheim ( or ; 15 April 1858 – 15 November 1917) was a French sociologist. Durkheim formally established the academic discipline of sociology and is commonly cited as one of the principal architects of modern social science, al ...
's classic study
The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life
''The Elementary Forms of Religious Life'' (french: Les formes élémentaires de la vie religieuse), published by the French sociologist Émile Durkheim in 1912, is a book that analyzes religion as a social phenomenon. Durkheim attributes the deve ...
(1912) it provided a sophisticated model of 'interlocking complex of beautiful and symmetrical kinship systems', though it was pieced together from stray informants from the broken Kariera tribal world. Ironically, it has been observed, as the tribe disappeared, what remnants of their lore survived to be recorded began to make an important impact on
anthropological thinking, with elements of it anticipated by some decades the core approach of
structural functionalism
Structural functionalism, or simply functionalism, is "a framework for building theory that sees society as a complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability".
This approach looks at society through a macro-level o ...
decades later.
A. P. Elkin
Adolphus Peter Elkin (27 March 1891 – 9 July 1979) was an Anglican clergyman, an influential Australian anthropologist during the mid twentieth century and a proponent of the assimilation of Indigenous Australians.
Early life
Elkin was bor ...
described the Kariera/Karimera structure as one of five kinship types in north Western Australia, and a type also found among the
Wailpi aborigines of the
Flinders Ranges
The Flinders Ranges are the largest mountain range in South Australia, which starts about north of Adelaide. The ranges stretch for over from Port Pirie to Lake Callabonna.
The Adnyamathanha people are the Aboriginal group who have inhabi ...
in
South Australia
South Australia (commonly abbreviated as SA) is a state in the southern central part of Australia. It covers some of the most arid parts of the country. With a total land area of , it is the fourth-largest of Australia's states and territories ...
. The re-analysis of this Kariera/Karimera theory played a significant role in
Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss
Claude Lévi-Strauss (, ; 28 November 1908 – 30 October 2009) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist whose work was key in the development of the theories of structuralism and structural anthropology. He held the chair of Social Anthro ...
's ''The Elementary Structures of Kinship'' (1949).
The Kariera/Karimera consisted of at least 19 residence-based groups, each with its own defined territory. Their kinship structure consisted of a four-class system, that can be represented as follows:
A Banaka male marries a Burung female: their offspring are classified as Palyeri. Palyeri men marry Karimera women, and their children become Banaka. The children of a Karimera man married to a Palyeri woman become Burung. Thus two
patrilineal
Patrilineality, also known as the male line, the spear side or agnatic kinship, is a common kinship system in which an individual's family membership derives from and is recorded through their father's lineage. It generally involves the inheritanc ...
moieties form: ''Banaka/Palyeri'' and ''Karimera/Burung.'' Radcliffe-Brown found no explanation for these section names, and thought them meaningless. Decades of intensive analysis failed to come up with an explanation of this four-section social system. In 1970 however the linguist
Carl Georg von Brandenstein
Carl-Georg Christoph Freiherr von Brandenstein (10 October 1909 – 8 January 2005) was a German linguist who took up the study of Australian Aboriginal languages.
Life
Born in 1909 in Hannover to , Carl-Georg finished high school in Weimar, an ...
managed to connect the four section names with animals: ''pannaga'' and ''purungu''(burung) were linked to the
goanna
A goanna is any one of several species of lizards of the genus '' Varanus'' found in Australia and Southeast Asia.
Around 70 species of ''Varanus'' are known, 25 of which are found in Australia. This varied group of carnivorous reptiles ranges ...
, while ''karimera'' (karimarra) and ''palyeri'' (palt'arri) were associated with the kangaroo. In addition, in a way reminiscent of
Western humoral theory, the elements in the classification suggested, as one can see in the diagram combinations of 3 oppositions, -active/passive:warm-blooded/cold-blooded, and concrete/abstract, - that each section embodied one of each of this binary elements in the code. It would follow that a sophisticated metaphysics was inscribed within the social order itself. The broader implication was that the attempt to isolate a theory of kinship itself, in terms of descent and marriage alone, were flawed, since many other distinct criteria, such as locality and totem, were also embedded in one's institutional identity
Impact
Apart from the germinal influence of Radcliffe-Brown's study of Kariera/Karimera kinship for anthropological theory, his classification of their territorial divisions, it is argued, laid the groundwork for later aboriginal claims to
native title
Aboriginal title is a common law doctrine that the land rights of indigenous peoples to customary tenure persist after the assumption of sovereignty under settler colonialism. The requirements of proof for the recognition of aboriginal title, ...
.
Alternative names
* ''Karimera''
* ''Gariera''
* ''Kaierra''
* ''Kariera, Karriara, Karriarra''
* ''Kyreara''
* ''Minjiburu, Minjubururu, Minjirbururu.''(Kariara term for an ancient
Port Hedland
A port is a maritime facility comprising one or more wharves or loading areas, where ships load and discharge cargo and passengers. Although usually situated on a sea coast or estuary, ports can also be found far inland, such as Ham ...
* ''Kudjunguru.'' ("coastal dwellers." (
Nyamal
The Nyamal are an Indigenous Australian, Indigenous Australian people of the Pilbara area of north-western Western Australia.
Language
A version of Nyamal language, Nyamal became the basis of a pidgin used among workers on pearling luggers in th ...
exonym
An endonym (from Greek: , 'inner' + , 'name'; also known as autonym) is a common, ''native'' name for a geographical place, group of people, individual person, language or dialect, meaning that it is used inside that particular place, group, ...
for the Kariera/Karimera and
Ngarla
The Ngarla are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
Country
Norman Tindale estimated their territory, to the west of Port Hedland, at around , describing it as lying along the coast to the west of Solitar ...
.)
* ''Paljarri''
Notes
Citations
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{{Authority control
Aboriginal peoples of Western Australia
Broome, Western Australia