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Brewarrina Aboriginal Fish Traps in north-west NSW are one of the oldest man-made structures in the world; Teardrop-shaped pools were created with rock and used to trap fish as they swam ...
Measures to restore and conserve Brewarrina's heritage-listed fish traps, in central western New South Wales, will be put in place under a new plan of management. Skip to main content.
Investigations underway into extending heritage area around Brewarrina fish traps. Topic: Indigenous Culture. Sun 5 Jan 2014 Sunday 5 January 2014 Sun 5 Jan 2014 at 9:14pm.
The Brewarrina Aboriginal Fish Traps, traditionally known as Baiame’s Ngunnhu, is a heritage-listed site located in the Barwon River near the Queensland border. They are estimated to be 40,000 ...
For a town of roughly 1,000 people, Bre has an abundance of rich history. It's widely known for it's stone fish traps or 'Ngunnhu', a structure designed for catching fish that swam upstream.
BREWARRINA, Australia -- A complex array of ancient stone fish traps in the Australian Outback has become a touchpoint in Australia's growing debate about the nature of Aboriginal life before ...
The Brewarrina fish traps now sit in the dry banks of the Barwon River. Credit: Rhett Wyman. Last summer, when the house’s sole resident looked out the window and saw only smoke, ...
A network of fish traps fashioned from stones near the meeting point of the Barwon and Darling rivers, the Ngunnhu is estimated to be about 40,000 years old and a traditional gathering place for ...
The recently dry river beds at the Brewarrina weir in northern New South Wales have been replenished over the weekend, bringing back to life the location of the national heritage listed fish traps ...