A trio of researchers, Adam Brumm, Mietje Germonpré, and Loukas Koungoulos, has proposed that the dingo and its relationship to Aboriginal foraging communities in Australia can serve as a model for ...
Jirrbal woman Sonya Takau says saving dingoes and advocating for the often-maligned apex predator has become her life's priority — even though it means she's often breaking the law. The dingo is the ...
Archaeologists in Australia unearthed the remains of a nearly 1,000-year-old dingo that appears to have been buried with care and “fed” river mussel shells for roughly five centuries after it died.
Burial remains from 800-2,000 years ago hint that the First Australians may have kept the continent’s famous canine species as pets. By Franz Lidz This article is part of our Pets special section on ...
A thousand years ago, the ancestors of today’s Barkindji people carefully buried a dingo (or garli, in the Barkindji language) in a mound of shells. Archaeologists recently studied the burial in ...
Living blanket, water diviner, wild pet: this is how the dingo has been represented across our cultural history. Members of Aboriginal communities are warned that this story may contain images and ...
In traditional Aboriginal society, women travelled with canine companions draped around their waists like garments of clothing. Dingoes played an important role in the protection and mobility of the ...
A 950-year-old dingo burial in Australia reveals clear archaeological evidence of humans ritually "feeding" an animal's grave for centuries, a new study reports. The symbolic feeding involved river ...
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