Re: First Nations, Science and Politics
Reply #14 –
We probably don’t need to go back tens of thousands of years to work out that the real issue for indigenous Australians was not occupation by a different people, but the fact that it took so long to happen.
For the vast majority of the last 3000 years the country was inhabited solely by indigenous people with little contact with other folks….
In the rest of the world-Europe, Asia, Africa and even central and North America, empires were rising and falling.
With the rise and fall of these nations, and the subsequent movement and displacement of populations…. ideas, inventions, communication were swapped and traded. There was a mingling of people and cultures which added to and enhanced the previous inhabitants of an area. There were of course areas where this contact had a negative effect with war and disease accompanying this spread of cultures. The end result though has been a positive one which has brought us to the modern world that exists today.
But even by the time of European settlement in Australia huge cities dotted the world. It was inevitable that there would eventually be contact and occupation of this area. If it hadn’t been the British , it would have been the Dutch, the French, the Portuguese, the Spanish or the Germans (once established)…and if not one of these colonial powers it would have come from somewhere at later date. In some respects, it is probably better that the majority of early settlement came from one country rather than the hotch-potch of colonialism that was Africa, with multiple European powers claiming territory.
It was always going to happen, if not in the 18th century, almost certainly in the 19th…and definitely by modern times. A world where this vast continent remained untouched just isn’t logical. So Indigenous Australians were always going to confront this occupation and displacement, and they were never going to be able to resist it happening.
Would there have been better ‘invaders’?
Possibly,
There certainly could have been worse
The rest of the world mixed and mingled for centuries.
By not having access to that and the associated advancements in a whole range of areas, it meant that Indigenous Australians were always disadvantaged in comparison.
To a certain extent Lods.
The Native Americans were isolated for up to 20,000 years, apart from the odd Irish monk, exploring Vikings and probably Basque fishermen.
A significant difference is the available resources. The Americas have potatoes, tomatoes, squash, corn, chilli, avocado, maple trees, cacao, quinoa, pineapple and beans, as well as pre-Columbus domesticated turkeys, Muscovy ducks, guinea pigs, llamas and alpacas. Of course, even the complex, sophisticated and highly organised South American cultures couldn't withstand relatively few Spaniards with horses, steel blades and firearms (and contagious diseases).
Over 200 years after European settlement, our only widespread native commercial crop is the Macadamia nut (grown mostly outside of Australia) and only essentially wild emus, crocodiles and marron are farmed in modest numbers.
The Dingo, which arrived in Australia between 5,000 and 10,000 years ago, most likely came via New Guinea (it's close relative is the New Guinea Singing Dog/Highland Wild Dog that first appeared in New Guinea around 11,000 years ago). The absence of the Dingo (and fossil or sub-fossil Dingo remains) from Tasmania supports the archaeological and DNA evidence that Dingoes arrived after the formation of Torres Strait. In other words, through human agency. While Dingoes reverted to their wild state, as did the New Guinea Dogs, they were tamed/domesticated and used for hunting, security and companionship by Aboriginal Australians. Domestication was part of the toolkit but there weren't suitable candidates apart from Dingoes and the odd Cape York feral pig.