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Kokatha

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The Kokatha, also known as the Kokatha Mula,[a] are an Aboriginal Australian people of the state of South Australia. They speak the Kokatha language, close to or a dialect of the Western Desert language.

Country

Traditional Kokatha lands extend over some 54,000 square miles (140,000 km2) according to the estimation of Norman Tindale, stretching over some of the harshest, waterless land on the Australian continent. They include Tarcoola, Kingoonyah, Pimba and the McDouall Peak as well as modern townships of Roxby Downs and Woomera. The lands extend west as far as Ooldea and the Ooldea Range while the northern frontier runs up to the Stuart Range and Lake Phillipson. Their boundary with Barngarla lands is marked by an ecological transition from their plateau to the lower hilly acacia scrubland and salt lake zones running south to the coast.[2]

The tribes bordering on Kokatha lands were, running north clockwise, the Pitjantjara, the Yankuntjatjarra, the Antakirinja, the Arabana and Kuyani to their east, the Barngarla on the southeastern flank, the Wirangu directly south, the Mirning southwest, and the Ngalia to their west.[3]

History of contact

The Kokatha were engaged in migration towards to southeast before the 1850s, when whites began to make their presence felt. Their hold on Ooldea area was relinquished around 1917 when they yielded before the pressure from the northern Yankuntjatjarra migrating there.[2]

Alternative names

  • Cocotah, Kookata, Cookutta, Kookatha
  • Gawler Range tribe
  • Geebera
  • Gogada
  • Gugada
  • Kakarrura. (as karkurera ="east") applied to a band west of Lake Torrens).
  • Keibara. ( "plain turkeys"— pejorative)
  • Kokatja. (Yankuntjatjarra pronunciation)
  • Koogatho, Kugurda,Koogurda, Koocatho
  • Koranta
  • Kotit-ta
  • Kukataja
  • Kukatha, Kukata, Kokata
  • Madutara. (Antakirinja exonym)
  • Maduwonga. (Arabana, also Jangkundjara exonym)
  • Nganitjiddia, Nganitjidi, Nganitjini. (Nauo and Barngarla exonym meaning "those who sneak and kill by night.")
  • Yallingarra (cf. alindjara ="east").

Source: Tindale 1974, p. 213

Notable people

Notes

  1. ^ The variation between these ethnonyms, Kukata/Kokata and Kokatha, may represent an original difference between two distinct Western desert dialects, one retaining a voiceless alveolar stop (t), the other a dental stop (th)[1] (Clendon 2015, p. 27)

Citations

  1. ^ Platt 1972, pp. 3–4.
  2. ^ a b Tindale 1974, p. 213.
  3. ^ MapASA.
  4. ^ Ralph 2010.

Sources