Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Aboriginal_tracker> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 17 of
17
with 100 items per page.
- Aboriginal_tracker abstract "In the years following British settlement in Australia, aboriginal trackers or black trackers, as they became known, were enlisted by settlers to assist them in navigating their way through the Australian landscape. The trackers' hunter-gatherer lifestyle gave rise to excellent tracking skills which were advantageous to settlers in assisting them in finding food and water and locating missing persons or capturing bushrangers.The first recorded employment of the services of Aboriginal trackers in Australia was in 1834, near Fremantle, Western Australia, when two trackers named Mogo and Mollydobbin tracked a missing five-year-old boy for over ten hours through the rough Australian bush. Another notable early event occurred in 1864 when Duff children Jane (7), Isaac (9) and Frank (4) Duff, lost for nine days in Wimmera, were found by aboriginal tracker 'King Richard'.".
- Aboriginal_tracker thumbnail Aboriginal_tracker_piper.jpg?width=300.
- Aboriginal_tracker wikiPageID "20604354".
- Aboriginal_tracker wikiPageRevisionID "586907916".
- Aboriginal_tracker hasPhotoCollection Aboriginal_tracker.
- Aboriginal_tracker subject Category:19th_century_in_Australia.
- Aboriginal_tracker subject Category:History_of_Indigenous_Australians.
- Aboriginal_tracker comment "In the years following British settlement in Australia, aboriginal trackers or black trackers, as they became known, were enlisted by settlers to assist them in navigating their way through the Australian landscape.".
- Aboriginal_tracker label "Aboriginal tracker".
- Aboriginal_tracker label "Aborigines Tracker".
- Aboriginal_tracker sameAs Aborigines_Tracker.
- Aboriginal_tracker sameAs m.0523x4v.
- Aboriginal_tracker sameAs Q322974.
- Aboriginal_tracker sameAs Q322974.
- Aboriginal_tracker wasDerivedFrom Aboriginal_tracker?oldid=586907916.
- Aboriginal_tracker depiction Aboriginal_tracker_piper.jpg.
- Aboriginal_tracker isPrimaryTopicOf Aboriginal_tracker.