The Biggest Estate on Earth How Aborigines Made Australia

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Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2013-04-01
Publisher(s): Allen & Unwin
List Price: $37.28

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Summary

Explodes the myth that pre-settlement Australia was an untamed wilderness revealing the complex, country-wide systems of land management used by Aboriginal people. Across Australia, early Europeans commented again and again that the land looked like a park. With extensive grassy patches and pathways, open woodlands and abundant wildlife, it evoked a country estate in England. Bill Gammage has discovered this was because Aboriginal people managed the land in a far more systematic and scientific fashion than we have ever realised. For over a decade, Gammage has examined written and visual records of the Australian landscape. He has uncovered an extraordinarily complex system of land management using fire and the life cycles of native plants to ensure plentiful wildlife and plant foods throughout the year. We know Aboriginal people spent far less time and effort than Europeans in securing food and shelter, and now we know how they did it. With details of land-management strategies from around Australia, THE BIGGEST ESTATE ON EARTH rewrites the history of this continent, with huge implications for us today. Once Aboriginal people were no longer able to tend their country, it became overgrown and vulnerable to the hugely damaging bushfires we now experience. And what we think of as virgin bush in a national park is nothing of the kind. AWARDS: Winner, 2011 Manning Clark House National Cultural Awards (Individual category); Shortlisted, 2012 Prime Minister's Literary Awards' Prize for Australian History and Shortlisted, 2012 Kay Daniels Award (Australian Historical Association).

Author Biography

Bill Gammage is a historianĀ and theĀ author of the The Broken Years: Australian Soldiers in the Great War and Sky Travellers.

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