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Australian Journal of Botany Australian Journal of Botany Society
Southern hemisphere botanical ecosystems
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Leichhardt’s ethnobotany for the eucalypts of south-east Queensland

Roderick J. Fensham https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3658-5867 A B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Queensland Herbarium, Mt Coot-tha Road, Toowong, Qld 4066, Australia.

B Department of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Saint Lucia, Qld 4072, Australia.Email: rod.fensham@qld.gov.au

Australian Journal of Botany 69(4) 185-214 https://doi.org/10.1071/BT21007
Submitted: 20 January 2021  Accepted: 23 March 2021   Published: 11 May 2021

Abstract

The explorer Ludwig Leichhardt travelled with Aboriginal people in south-east Queensland during 1843–44. Leichhardt’s record of Aboriginal taxonomy in Yagara, Wakka, Kabi, and other languages was related to the current taxonomy of the eucalypts of south-east Queensland. Most of the taxonomic entities could be associated across cultures and verifies the intimate understanding of Aboriginal peoples with tree species that are difficult to distinguish in the field. Leichhardt’s record together with that of Gairabau, a Dungidau man from south-east Queensland verifies a broad array of uses for eucalypts including as gum for chewing, dying, and medicine; ash rubbed into the skin for soothing young mothers, where bees, honey and wax can be found, hollow logs for fish-traps, hard timber for weapons and utensils, bark for shelter, canoes, embalming, and containers – some species contained water, others were used to create smoke for sending signals, some species indicated an unsuitable camp-site, and others indicated the likelihood of finding koalas and possum as game. Flowering and the shedding of bark are signs for the bush calendar.

Warning: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the names and images of deceased persons.

Keywords: Aboriginal language, Aboriginal languages, Ludwig Leichhardt, ethnobotany, eucalypts, First Nations Australians, indigenous, Indigenous names, taxonomy, south-east Queensland, Aboriginal people, Aboriginal peoples.


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