The Nangatara ranged over some 13,800 square miles (36,000 km2) of territory, northwest of the Canning Stock Route, mainly between Lake Wooloomber and a place called Kuljai, a well (no.48) mapped for that area. Their northwestern boundary lay halfway between the Percival Lakes and Joanna Springs.[1]
Lifestyle
Given the scarcity of water, with only some available in distant wells and rock catchment areas, when drought struck, the Nangatara would trek to Karbardi, south of Adverse Well. The heartland of their territory was Rama, a type of hard gravel plain which they called laribuka.[1]
History
Even before contact with whites, the Nangatara were pushing northwards along the Canning Stock Route, as the Walmadjari withdrew from that part of their territory.[1]
Alternative names
Nangadjara
Njangadjara
Julbaritja (an exonym of the Njangamarda and Mangala, meaning 'southerners')
Yulbari-dja, Julbaridja
Ilbaridja
Nanidjara (scornful term of abuse used by the Wanman people for them, just as other tribes applied it also the Wanman)
Petri, Helmut (August 1955a). "Frobenius-Expedition nach Nordwest-Australien 1953-1955 (Kurzer Reisebericht)". Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde (in German). 6 (2). Frobenius Institute: 92–94. JSTOR40341215.
Petri, Helmut (August 1955b). "Dynamik im Stammesleben Nordwest-Australiens". Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde (in German). 6 (3). Frobenius Institute: 152–168. JSTOR40341221.
Worms, Ernest Ailred (September–December 1951). "Review: Das Schwirrholz. Eine Untersuchung über die Verbreitung und Bedeutung der Schwirren im Kult by Otto Zerries". Anthropos. 46 (5/6). Anthropos Institut: 1018–1020. JSTOR40449557.