Title: The Indigenous Weather Knowledge Project:
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2The Indigenous Weather Knowledge Project
- John L McBride
- Bureau of Meteorology Research Centre Melbourne
www.bom.gov.au/iwk/ J.mcbride_at_bom.gov.au
3The Indigenous Weather Knowledge Project
- Purpose is to recognise the value of the
knowledge of weather and climate held by the
Indigenous people of Australia and the Torres
Strait Islands - IWK is a joint project involving the Indigenous
communities, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Commission (ATSIC), the Bureau of
Meteorology, and Monash Universitys Centre for
Australian Indigenous Studies (CAIS) and School
of Geography and Environmental Science.
4http//www.bom.gov.au
- The Bureau of Meteorology website is the normal
mode of public access for weather services, for
climate services, for educational material, and
for media releases - One of the most popular Websites in the country
- More than 60,000 hits per day
- Strong student interest
5http//www.bom.gov.au
- When a member of the public accesses the Bureau
website, besides having available forecast,
warnings, and climate information, recognition is
given to the knowledge collected by the original
inhabitants of this country over 10s of
thousands of years
6- The Website
- Using information collected, further develop
- the IWK website as an important national
resource. - Formal Research
- Collection, synthesis and interpretation of
- Indigenous knowledge on specific weather
- events and patterns, seasonal and inter-annual
- climate variability, and longer-term climate
- change - to show how indigenous Australians
- understand and interpret their climatic
- environment and how this helps in connection
- to place
- Includes both archival and direct communication
with the holders of the knowledge.
7- Significance of the Project
- Has potential to yield useful information on
managing the Australian environment - Will show how knowledge of this type is an
important component of indigenous identity and
connection to place - Will foster the development of an appreciation of
Indigenous knowledge and culture in the wider
community (ie promote traditional knowledge as
being as equally valid as scientific knowledge) - Recognises the importance of ethical issues, in
the context that past scientific studies have
often not sought permission from the original
Indigenous owners for use of their cultural
heritage.
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18- Collection of Indigenous Knowledge includes
several stages - Acquiring the knowledge
- Obtaining permission
- Returning the knowledge to the traditional owners
- Maintaining a relationship
- We want to do everything right Before we put
anything on our website, we obtain permissions
from the Council of Elders from the community
that owns that knowledge. - We are not stupid If your community is having
problems (deaths, petrol-sniffing, etc.), we
shall go away come back when you are ready
19Visit to Bwgcolman Community School, Palm Island
20Visit to Indigenous Radio Station 4K1G, Townsville
21Visit to Laura Cultural Festival, Cape York
22Laura Cultural Festival
- Learned some of the terminology and
infrastructure of this type of work - Procedural Text knowledge as to how to follow
the signs of the changing seasons to collect
fruit, move shelter etc - Before Time text Stories and myths legends from
past time - Songwork recording the songs, transcribing the
text, etc.
23Laura Cultural Festival
- Aboriginal people have guidelines to the weather.
The guidelines are the flowers and the trees.
When the weather pattern changes, it goes from
this way to the other way, it is time to plant.
When you plant, you need to know which way the
energy is going. - Right now the wattle flower is out. It is a
gentle, sensitive flower. It needs limited
sunlight. It tells you winter is coming. So you
observe the weather. The changing pattern of the
weather guides you as to how to collect food.
- Wilfred Gordon (Willie), an elder of the
Nugal-warra
24Why am I here?
- I want you to join us
- Give us your ideas
- School Projects
- The students can question the elders
- What are the old stories about how rain started?
How did the old people know when the wet season
started? Did they call it the wet season? - Use the site to tell people about all the
different aboriginal languages
25Why am I here?
- Use the site to get people interested in the
spirituality - Use the site to show how the indigenous people
were at one with nature - Weather told us when to hunt
- When to burn
- When to make shelter
- Move away from seasonal calendars
- Weather and burning
- Climate and plants, climate and animals
- We could write a book
- Seasons and burning Hunting and gathering
following the weather When the rain didnt come,
etc.
26- This project has had a lot of interest in the
press
27Readers Digest Article
28Time Magazine Article
29- THEY RING US UP, AND THEY ASK US
- HOW ARE YOU GOING TO USE THIS INFORMATION?
- Will it improve the weather forecasts?
30- Maybe we can use this site to teach us westerners
that knowledge is not always to be used. - Teach us about the ancestral beings who set up
laws and customs for us to follow. - Hear the words of somone like Bill Neidjie
31- First there is Dooruk, the emu, with the dust of
the red Earth Mother still on his feet. He comes
to remind us to protect the land, to always put
back as much as we take - Then there is Kopoo, the red kangaroo..
- And Mungoogarlie the goanna
32- But the animals of our Earth Mother come to say
more than this. They come to say that our
creator, that Rainbow Serpent, she get weak with
anger and grief for what we are doing to this
earth.
33Weather is about survival. If we keep an eye on
the weather, we get food and we survive. You
cant write the weather down in stone These
things can change, because of our actions, like
cutting down the forest. The patterns will
change. . Willie Gordon