Celebrating 100 Indigenous UNSW Law Graduates 100-Indigenous-Law-Graduates-Event_Booklet_V13_FIN | Page 34

34 Sydney’s Aboriginal people were divided into clan groups of around twenty-five to sixty people, who traced their lineage through their fathers back to a common ancestor. They shared totems and had primary rights to their clan estate. The precise area of these estates is not known. We know that the connections of each clan through marriage and ceremonial obligations linked them to areas far beyond their individual estate. There were many languages spoken by Aboriginal people across coastal Sydney. cabbage tree leaves forming the roof (fig. 4). It is most likely that they set up camp along the margins of the swamps rather than on top of the open dunes, but we have no direct evidence to confirm this. The swamps would have provided a range of foods and resources, including fish, eels, tortoise and reeds for weaving. The surrounding scrub also contained possums, the skins of which were sewn together by Aboriginal people to make winter cloaks. When Aboriginal people set up camp in the dunes, Aboriginal people most likely slept in bough-framed shelters, with bark and Fig. 5 Landscape in 1870s. John Skinner Prout c.1874 -1876. View Near Botany Bay, State Library of Victoria Fig.4 Augustus Earle, c. 1826. Australian native in his bark hut, National Library of Australia