Abstract

[Excerpt from p. 2–3] When about to cross any large stream, the native, if by himself, will guard against possible accident from crocodile or shark, by practising certain auguries, some of which have already been detailed. When in company, such practices are usually discarded, all his companions swimming across in more or less close formation with a good deal of splashing and shouting. Where however necessity demands that a known crocodile infested river has to be crossed, and there is no canoe, the black manages it by diving, a method which I had an opportunity of witnessing on the Lower Normanby River (Princess Charlotte Bay). Gliding silently below the surface of the water, he keeps close to the bottom; if it is too wide, he loses no time in coming up for a breath of fresh air and down again: should he come across one of these saurians, he immediately stirs up around him the dark mud on the river bed, and makes good his escape very much on the same lines as a cuttle-fish when in danger. Similar precautions are taken in this same district when black is diving for lily-seeds in any suspected pool, etc., there always being some friend of his or hers watching, either from the banks or an overhanging tree; the latter, on seeing the shadow or long streaky film of fine bubbles indicating the approach of the reptile, immediately splashes the water surface violently with some heavy stick, etc., and so gives the signal to the individual below, who quickly makes up the bank by crawling and kicking up the mud as already described. Etc.

Please note: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this publication may relate to religious beliefs, death, burial practices or initiation ceremonies and rites; or it may contain images or names of deceased persons or images that may be regarded as unsuitable for children.

 
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Bibliographic Data

Short Form
Roth, 1910, Rec. Aust. Mus. 8(1): 1–19
Author
Walter E. Roth
Year
1910
Title
North Queensland Ethnography. Bulletin No. 14. Transport and trade
Serial Title
Records of the Australian Museum
Volume
8
Issue
1
Start Page
1
End Page
19
DOI
10.3853/j.0067-1975.8.1910.932
Language
en
Plates
plates i–vii
Date Published
15 November 1910
Cover Date
15 November 1910
ISSN (print)
0067-1975
CODEN
RAUMAJ
Publisher
The Australian Museum
Place Published
Sydney, Australia
Digitized
20 April 2009
Available Online
23 July 2009
Reference Number
932
EndNote
932.enw
Title Page
932.pdf
File size: 70kB
Complete Work
932_complete.pdf
File size: 5185kB