Spinifex And Sand Pioneering And Exploration In Western Australia By David W Carnegie



















































































































 - 

The tribe had left behind them a number of treasures - bundles of
firemaking sticks, bean-and-gum ornaments, and the - Page 412
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The Tribe Had Left Behind Them A Number Of Treasures - Bundles Of Firemaking Sticks, Bean-And-Gum Ornaments, And The Usual Bark "Portmanteaus" [Note At End Of Paragraph.] Containing Hair-String, Feathers, Red Ochre, And Other Knick-Knacks.

Amongst their weapons was a curiously shaped boomerang; on one of the woommeras was a rough carving of either a spider or crab.

As soon as the camels arrived we unloaded and set to work on the well, "soak-sucking" in our old style. By morning we had watered the camels and horses. The former were of course pretty fit, but the poor ponies had done a fair stage, especially so since they had had no feed except the rank dry tops of the spinifex. May 3rd sunrise, to May 8th sunrise, they had travelled on what water we could afford them from our own supply, viz., three gallons apiece nightly, and six gallons the first night. The grass around the well, though dry, was of great benefit to them. For the camels we had to cut down the mulga trees, the branches of which grew too high from the ground to permit them to browse off the leaves. A number of dingoes serenaded us as we worked at night; what they live upon is not quite clear, unless it be spinifex rats. There were other small rats in the locality, two of which the dwarf had for supper - plucked, warmed upon the ashes, torn in pieces by his long nails and eaten; an unpleasant meal to witness, and the partaker of it badly needed a finger-bowl, for his hands and beard were smeared with blood. He did not take kindly to salt beef, for his teeth were not fit for hard work, as he pointed out to us; and salt beef is not by any means easy to masticate.

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