Aboriginal People in the Gibson Desert
Video clip synopsis – In 1966 a few Aboriginal families were living nomadic lives in the heart of Australia's Gibson Desert. Women would collect seeds from Woolybuck grass to make bread whilst their husbands searched for old spearheads and tools for hunting.
Year of production - 1966
Duration - 2min 2sec
Tags - Australian History, change and continuity, culture, identity, Indigenous Australia, sustainability, see all tags
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In the 1960s a film crew made an *ethnographic record of the dwindling *Indigenous population of the Gibson desert area. Indigenous people had lived in the area for thousands of years in a traditional way, before the destruction of that way of life in the late twentieth century.
- Indigenous – born or produced naturally in a land, native
- ethnographic – documentary style filmmaking that records information about a society or culture
- Write a brief synopsis of the clip
- In the clip it says that daughter ‘Nabula’ is unmarried because of the dwindling desert population:
- What may have caused this population reduction?
- What attitude do you think the narrator has to the people featured in the clip and the way they live? Explain your response.
- Imagine that you are part of the film crew. Are there any special ethical considerations that you think would need to be observed? For example, what might happen if you left behind examples of non-traditional technology, such as metal axes? Or if you arranged for plane food drops?
- Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal perspectives of the relationship between land and country vary. What evidence is there in the film of this relationship for the Aboriginal family?
- This clip records some the day in the life of Djagamara and his family who were filmed ‘where they had camped’.In the same film from which this clip is taken ‘Minma and his family were taken back to Minma’s country from Warburton Mission to record how they had lived until just a few months before.”
- Why may have Minma and his family been living in a mission and not Djagamara’s family?
- Consider the different kind of life Djagamara and his family would have on a mission compared to their traditional nomadic life. What aspects of his family may be disapproved of by the mission personnel?
- The Europeans running the mission would consider Minma and his family’s new life style preferable to that of Djagamaras. Why would they hold that view.
- How important are such film clips as this one on the people of the Western Desert today? Explain.


