Let’s begin with a small attempt to understand one of Nature’s marvels. Looking like a misfit, the boab tree, also known as bottle tree or upside-down tree due to its freaky swollen trunk, is a ...
Baobabs, the iconic bottle trees of Africa and Madagascar, have a single relative, the boab, living in the Kimberley region of northwest Australia. No one knows when and how the boab came across from ...
The "enormously significant" cultural artefacts were living sites and also document the songlines of the region. But they are destined to disappear. The carvings have been compared to the more famous ...
Carvings on boab trees in northern Australia's Tanami Desert support stories told by elders about how their land came to be, according to a team of Indigenous people and archaeologists. The carvings ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Sue O'Connor, Author provided Australia’s Tanami desert is one of the most isolated and arid places on Earth. It’s a hard place to ...
The boab trees of the remote Tanami desert are carved with centuries of Indigenous history – and they’re under threat. Australia’s Tanami desert is one of the most isolated and arid places on Earth.
Stephen has degrees in science (Physics major) and arts (English Literature and the History and Philosophy of Science), as well as a Graduate Diploma in Science Communication. Stephen has degrees in ...
A giant boab tree from the Kimberley is expected to arrive in Perth on Saturday to be transplanted in Kings Park. The tree is believed to be 750-years-old, and is making the 3,200 kilometre journey on ...
Carvings in boab trees are as significant as rock art for Indigenous Australians. Now, there is a race against time to document the ancient art in the bark of boabs before the remarkable heritage ...
For all this, the dominant character here is the Kimberley itself. This old country that drifted in and welded on to the continent. And if we look to see that in just one face, surely it is in that of ...
In a study published recently in PLOS ONE, we solve one part of this mystery by showing that ancient Aboriginal peoples were responsible for spreading the boab in the Kimberley. An early hypothesis ...