Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Aboriginal Lore/Answer Key"

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'''Bushfood''' refers to any Australian native food, although it sometimes is used with the specific connotation of "food found in the [[Outback]] while living on the land". It is also called '''bushtucker'''.
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'''Bark painting''' is an [[Australian]] [[Indigenous Australians|Aboriginal]] art-form which is done on the interior strip of a [[bark|tree bark]]. Also called "tapa", the pieces are made by scratching or painting the designs. Current designs are made in [[New Guinea]] and [[Melanesia]], in addition to Australia. Artists typically use red, yellow, white, brown, and black pigments. The works are often painted inside a low, bark-roofed shelter.
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==External links==
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*[http://www.aboriginalartonline.com/art/bark.php Aboriginal Art] - Bark paintings
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[[Category:Australian Aboriginal art]]
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[[Category:Painting techniques]]
  
In the last decade, industry groups such as the Southern Bushfood Association, the Queensland Bushfood Association, the Northern Bushfood Association, and many others have been pushing for the introduction of bushfood as genuine cuisine in Australian and international restaurants. The term "Bushfood" is the current term for Australian native cuisine, evolving from the older-style "bushtucker" which was used in the 1970s and 1980s. The word "bushfood" was chosen to reflect the sustainable nature of the industry's products, and to help exporters with product branding. It is the term most often used by [[Australian]] [[Government]] and [[CSIRO]] sources & authors.
 
  
Bushfood includes both [[plant]] and [[animal]] foods. Examples of Australian native animal foods ([[meat]]) include [[kangaroo]], [[emu]] and [[crocodile]]. These meats are not uncommon in Australian restaurants. Other animals, for example the [[Goanna]] and the [[witchetty grub]], were eaten by [[Indigenous Australians|Aboriginal]] Australians and thus qualify as bushfood in every sense of the word.
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                          Dogs bark!!!!!!
  
Examples of Australian native plant foods include the [[Quandong]] (''Santalum acuminatum''), Bush Raisin or Bush Tomato (''Solanum centrale''), Warrigal Greens (''Tetragonia tetragonioides'', or [[New Zealand]] Spinach), and [[Tasmannia|Mountain Pepper]] (''Tasmannia lanceolata'', the Mountain Pepperbush, is one example). The most identifiable (and probably only) bushfood plant harvested and sold in commercial quantities is the [[macadamia]] nut ''(Macadamia integrifolia)''.
 
  
Since the 1970s, many TV shows have made use of the bushfood theme. [[Malcolm Douglas]] was one of the first presenters to show how to 'live off the land' in the Australian Outback. Major [[Les Hiddins]], a retired [[Australian Army]] soldier, presented a hit TV series called ''Bush Tucker Man'' on the [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC TV]] network in the late 1980s. In the series, Hiddins demonstrated his training and research in combat survival by locating native foodstuffs in the northern Australian Outback.
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                Did you know paper is made from the bark of a tree.  
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==External links==
 
* [http://www.bushfood.net/forum Australian Bushfood and Native Medicine Forum]
 
* [http://ausbushfoods.com/ Bushfoods Magazine]
 
* [http://eataustralia.info Eat Australia]
 
* [http://www.bushtucker.com.au/ A Bushfood/Bushtucker resource site]
 
  
[[Category:Australian culture]]
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  the indians often used bark to keep thier skin in good health. the men would usally rub it on thier wive's faces, ears, rear ends, stomachs, legs, arms, backs, feet, hands, and usally they rubed it mostly on thier wives breast.
[[Category:Australian cuisine]]
 

Revision as of 22:55, 18 April 2006

Bark painting is an Australian Aboriginal art-form which is done on the interior strip of a tree bark. Also called "tapa", the pieces are made by scratching or painting the designs. Current designs are made in New Guinea and Melanesia, in addition to Australia. Artists typically use red, yellow, white, brown, and black pigments. The works are often painted inside a low, bark-roofed shelter.

External links


                          Dogs bark!!!!!!


               Did you know paper is made from the bark of a tree. 


 the indians often used bark to keep thier skin in good health. the men would usally rub it on thier wive's faces, ears, rear ends, stomachs, legs, arms, backs, feet, hands, and usally they rubed it mostly on thier wives breast.