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The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey (Read 63799 times)
freediver
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #75 - Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm
 
Quote:
Only after facing Aborigines who defended their land


You obviously didn't open your eyes in your travels. There are abandoned homesteads and small farming townships all over Australia. Even your own evidence puts climate first ahead of hostile aborigines - and this was for a single attempt, not a pattern of settlement.

Quote:
Really. So you can gives us links to studies showing that Arnhem Land is not suitable for cattle grazing then?


How about the maps of actual farm usage? Compared to the evidence you thought was relevant - the prime example being a single letter from the 1800's containing the uninformed opinion of a single observer, the second example being a modified map that deliberately excluded the key information, this puts me miles ahead of you in the evidence game, and that only took me a few minutes.

Quote:
That agriculture has been deemed to be suitable in the area is sustained by the repeated attempts


Again Falah, you have the evidence, but turn rational itnerpretation on its head. Suitability for agriculture should be judged by the success of agriculture. Attempts that turned into failures indicate that it is not suitable for agriculture, especially when you own evidence lists climate as the main cause for a specific example. This is a consistent pattern over the NT that is not confined to the areas you attribute to aboriginal hostility.

Quote:
...everything bore the most luxuriant appearance..


Falah, how is this any more of an informed opinion than your incredibly naive use of the colour on google earth as an indicator of suitability for european farming methods?

Quote:
The soil [at Point Smith] is chiefly of a gray sandy earth, and in some parts might be called even rich...The climate seems here to favour vegetation so much that the quality of the soil appears to be of minor importance, for everything thrives and looks verdant


Falah, this entire continent is full of examples of land that appeared rich and fertile in it's virgin state but turned out to be very poor in practice. Rather than having genuinely fertile soils, what little nutrients were present were locked up in the existing vegetation and was quickly depleted by farming. Jared Diamond gives a few examples in his book 'Collapse', but it is a common theme in Australian agriculture and even fisheries.

Were you unaware of this, or are you being deliberately deceptive by using uninformed pre-agriculutural assessments above the wealth of evidence and experience from actual attempts at farming this land?

Quote:
However it is more pertinent to discuss Arnhem Land where the effects of Maccasan trade and cultural exchange was most profound.


Why is it more 'pertinent'? Where did the Maccassans tend to come ashore in the Broome area? Given that you only have two examples to go by, surely you should make as much use as possible of what little evidence you have in attempting to assign cause and effect, rather than tossing half of it aside?

Quote:
Most of the coast between Broome and the NT border were already Aboriginal Reserves prior to the Karrajarri title decision.


Was this also a result of hostile aborigines?
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #76 - Jun 5th, 2012 at 8:59pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
The soil [at Point Smith] is chiefly of a gray sandy earth, and in some parts might be called even rich...The climate seems here to favour vegetation so much that the quality of the soil appears to be of minor importance, for everything thrives and looks verdant


Falah, this entire continent is full of examples of land that appeared rich and fertile in it's virgin state but turned out to be very poor in practice. Rather than having genuinely fertile soils, what little nutrients were present were locked up in the existing vegetation and was quickly depleted by farming. Jared Diamond gives a few examples in his book 'Collapse', but it is a common theme in Australian agriculture and even fisheries.

Were you unaware of this, or are you being deliberately deceptive by using uninformed pre-agriculutural assessments above the wealth of evidence and experience from actual attempts at farming this land?


Grin



It is a case of deceptive use of ignorance. Very common with Muslims. When it comes to debating anything involving Islam (and with Muslims, is there anything that doesn't ?),  it is a deliberate strategy to stay actively, militantly ignorant and use that as a strategic weapon against anyone.

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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #77 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 12:40am
 
freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
Only after facing Aborigines who defended their land


You obviously didn't open your eyes in your travels. There are abandoned homesteads and small farming townships all over Australia.



I have found abandoned homesteads in various parts of Australia.

However, unlike Arnhem Land, none of them was abandoned due to an inability to exterminate Aborigines. In fact, in the places I have found abandoned homesteads, the Aboriginal populations have been removed from the land.

My research into these homesteads' collapse has shown that the cause was due to the homesteads being in regions with too little rain, or being too small.

There were also many farms that went out of business in the mid 20th century due to a series of events such as the severe drought across most of Australia from 1918-1920, rising Australian currency in the mid 1920's s due to Britain devaluing their own pound, and subsequent commodity price crashes in Britain in the late 1920's and 1930's, drought across Eastern Australia from 1937-1947, and then Australia's main export market, Britain, joining the Common Market - many small and marginal farms never recovered from these events.

These events do not apply to the settlement of Arnhem Land in the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century.



freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
Really. So you can gives us links to studies showing that Arnhem Land is not suitable for cattle grazing then?


How about the maps of actual farm usage? Compared to the evidence you thought was relevant - the prime example being a single letter from the 1800's



Freeliar did you even bother to read all the evidence I provided?

Journals of British explorers saying how rich and fertile Arnhem Land was, and how suitable it would be for cattle grazing.

Matthew Flinders said he had never sen an area so close the equator that so suited to cattle grazing as he found in Arnhem Land.

There are similar reports from other exploratory expeditions sent by the British government and also by private individuals.

The scores of attempts by Europeans to settle in Arnhem Land - which were all attacked by the Indigenous inhabitants - demonstrate that people interested in farming felt that Anrhem Land was indeed suitable for farming.

The fact is that Aborigines putting up a fight was at least a substantial factor in the failure of every attempt to settle Arnhem Land.



freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
That agriculture has been deemed to be suitable in the area is sustained by the repeated attempts


Suitability for agriculture should be judged by the success of agriculture.


According to your logic the entire continent of Australia should be deemed unsuitable for farming because the Japanese failed to implement their farming techniques here in the 1940's. Grin


freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Attempts that turned into failures indicate that it is not suitable for agriculture,

No, failed attempts in fertile land demonstrate successful self-defence of Indigenous Australians.



freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
especially when you own evidence lists climate as the main cause for a specific example.


Freeliar, that is nonsense. If climate was a factor then why are there farms in the Kimberley region and Darwin area. According to your climate excuse there should be no European farms anywhere in northern Australia.

Every attempt to settle Arnhem Land met resistance from Indigenous Australians - every attempt - and there were dozens.

All the early British explorers found Arnhem Land to be good fertile land, but all were attacked- Matthew Flinders, John Lort Stokes, and Philip Parker recorded very similar experiences in Arnhem Land.

The British government and British entrepreneurs  considered Arnhem Land fertile enough to warrant significant investment and dozens of attempts at settlements, all were attacked by Indigenous Australians.


freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
This is a consistent pattern over the NT that is not confined to the areas you attribute to aboriginal hostility.


Freeliar, every part of the Northern Territory that is not Aboiginal Land is farmland apart from the swamps  around Darwin.


Have a look at the map which you posted. Even the less suitable area surrounding Darwin is mostly used for grazing!

Darwin is surrounded by swampland!

Arnhem Land is much better quality land, yet look at the map you provided grazing exists in most of the land around Darwin except for the worst swampland.



freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
However it is more pertinent to discuss Arnhem Land where the effects of Maccasan trade and cultural exchange was most profound.


Why is it more 'pertinent'?


I just explained. Macassan influence was strongest in Arnhem Land. If we want to examine the effect of Macassan cultural exchange it would be make sense to look at the area where that exchange was strongest felt. Can your feeble grasp this concept is that to challenging for you?


freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Where did the Maccassans tend to come ashore in the Broome area? Given that you only have two examples to go by, surely you should make as much use as possible of what little evidence you have in attempting to assign cause and effect, rather than tossing half of it aside?


Freeliar, Macassan campsites have been identified all over the Kimberley coast, some of the earthernware and firearms are centuries old.

Europeans recorded seeing Macassans across the coast, and Indigenous folklore records there presence.


If you are interested in reading about the identification of historical Macassan sites I suggest you read Professor Campbell Macknight's work on the topic. He is considered an expert on the topic and gave me advice on my thesis.

His book Voyage to Marege is very interesting.
His research is concentrated more on Arnhem Land.



The work of T Burns records numerous finds of Macassan sites on the Western Australian coast. If you are interested you could read  National Survey for the Register of Macassan/Indonesian Earthernware Pottery-shard Collections from the Northern Australian Coast:basis for the study of historical links between Australia and south-east Asia, a report for the Western Australia Heritage Committee, Department of Geology,
University of Western Australia, 1989.


http://books.google.com.au/books/about/National_Survey_for_the_Register_of_Maca....

http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/34410802?q&c=book


French explorer, Frecycinet, recorded seeing 26 Macassan ships on the Kimberley coast in 1802.

Otherwise the work of historian Ian Crawford contains anecdotal evidence and folklore from Indigineous people in the Broome region.



British explorers in this region found Indigenous Australians displaying behaviour that demonstrated an understanding of foreigners such as approaching their ships and wanting to trade. Behaviour unheard of amongst Indigenous people in non-Macassan trade areas.



 

freediver wrote on Jun 5th, 2012 at 7:54pm:
Quote:
Most of the coast between Broome and the NT border were already Aboriginal Reserves prior to the Karrajarri title decision.




Was this also a result of hostile aborigines?





I suggest you read the work of Dr Ian Crawford. His excllent book, We Won the Victory, explains how the Indigenous people in the area resisted European invasion.

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« Last Edit: Jun 6th, 2012 at 1:06am by falah »  

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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #78 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 1:56am
 
Arnhem Land, place never visited by Freeliar, yet somehow deemed by him to be unsuitable for cattle grazing:

...



Quote:
Swamp buffalo were introduced into the Northern Territory from Timor early in the 19th century as a food source and a beast of burden. They escaped, thrived and became feral, causing significant environmental damage. Buffalo are also found in Arnhem Land and the Top End. An estimated 350,000 buffalo were living on the floodplains of Arnhem Land and the Katherine region in the 1980s. As a result, they were hunted in the Top End from 1885 until 1980.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/83/Water_Buffalo_at_Fogg_D...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Buffalo#Australia



http://buffaloaustralia.org/



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« Last Edit: Jun 6th, 2012 at 2:05am by falah »  

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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #79 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 7:56pm
 
Quote:
Arnhem Land, place never visited by Freeliar, yet somehow deemed by him to be unsuitable for cattle grazing:


Falah, can you explain why the plain is treeless?

Also, what do you think is the key difference between a cow and a water buffalo?
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #80 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 9:06pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 7:56pm:
what do you think is the key difference between a cow and a water buffalo?


In my opinion, cows meat tastes better than buffaloe.

Buffaloes were introduced to Arnhem Land by European settlers in the 1820's. The animal has been so successful in Anrhem Land that it has come to be considered a pest.

Quote:
Water buffalo have been domesticated for 5,000 years, and have become economically important animals. They provide more than 5% of the world’s milk supply...Milk from these animals is used by many human populations, and is the traditional raw material for mozzarella cheese and curd due to its higher fat content.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Buffalo#Importance_to_humans


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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #81 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 9:15pm
 
falah wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 9:06pm:
freediver wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 7:56pm:
what do you think is the key difference between a cow and a water buffalo?


In my opinion, cows meat tastes better than buffaloe.

Buffaloes were introduced to Arnhem Land by European settlers in the 1820's. The animal has been so successful in Anrhem Land that it has come to be considered a pest.

Quote:
Water buffalo have been domesticated for 5,000 years, and have become economically important animals. They provide more than 5% of the world’s milk supply...Milk from these animals is used by many human populations, and is the traditional raw material for mozzarella cheese and curd due to its higher fat content.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Buffalo#Importance_to_humans




I see you missed the point. It's the water. Buffalo can handle it, but cattle farms and swamps don't really mix, especially tropical swamps.
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #82 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:21pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 9:15pm:
falah wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 9:06pm:
freediver wrote on Jun 6th, 2012 at 7:56pm:
what do you think is the key difference between a cow and a water buffalo?


In my opinion, cows meat tastes better than buffaloe.

Buffaloes were introduced to Arnhem Land by European settlers in the 1820's. The animal has been so successful in Anrhem Land that it has come to be considered a pest.

Quote:
Water buffalo have been domesticated for 5,000 years, and have become economically important animals. They provide more than 5% of the world’s milk supply...Milk from these animals is used by many human populations, and is the traditional raw material for mozzarella cheese and curd due to its higher fat content.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Buffalo#Importance_to_humans




I see you missed the point. It's the water. Buffalo can handle it, but cattle farms and swamps don't really mix, especially tropical swamps.


Freeliar, More than 90%  of Arnhem Land is not swamp, much of it is a plateau. Quote:
East of the East Alligator River, most of the rivers of Arnhem Land are relatively small, and the floodplains relatively restricted.

http://www.savanna.org.au/al/al_landscape.html


Buffalo is just one example of a type of farming that can be successful in Arnhem Land if Europeans had only managed to conquer the lands.



Quote:
Remote meatworks revived


Posted: Thu, November 11, 2010

http://www.nlc.org.au/images/sized/files/various/DSC00489-400x0.JPG
Federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin makes a purchase from Gunbalanya Meatworks.

The revival of a run-down cattle station and adjoining abbatoir in a remote Northern Territory community is providing real jobs and affordable fresh meat to the Aboriginal peoples of Western Arnhem Land.

The community of Gunbalanya, near the northern edge of world heritage listed Kakadu National Park, celebrated the official opening of the revamped Gunbalanya Meat Supply Pty Ltd operation in early November 2010.

The meatworks is processing beef from the Aboriginal-owned Gunbalanya Station, which boasts more than 250 square kilometres of rich black floodplain country, and eventually hopes to kill up to 90 head per week.

The meatworks revival comes on the back of an agreement struck between the Northern Land Council, the Indigenous Land Corporation and Gunbalanya meatworks.

Under the deal, ILC will work in partnership with the community over 15 years to improve infrastructure and grazing practices at Gunbalanya Station, taking the cattle herd from 1,000 to 7,000 head, and to provide a major upgrade of the meatworks.

It’s hoped the enterprise will soon employ up to 30 people and young men from Gunbalanya have shown their keen to work in both the pastoral and meat processing fields.

NLC’s land management facilitator David Armstorng says the revival of Gunbalanya Station and the meatworks showed what could be achieved through good will negotiation and co-operation between families and organisations.

“Traditional owners came to the Northern Land Council and wanted to work a way forward because their business was basically broken so the Northern Land Council, through the Indigenous Pastoral Program, got out here and looked at the figures and looked at ways forward for the business.”

Under the arrangement the ILC will spend $3 million upgrading station infrastructure and extending the meatworks over 15 years.
It’s hoped the property, once fully re-fenced, can support 7000-8000 cattle, allowing ILC to use Gunbalanya Station as a finishing point for its northern herd and increasing kill numbers at the meatworks.

Adrian Gumudrul is one of the stockmen employed at Gunbalanya Station and, having spent almost half a century in the saddle, he’s the perfect mentor for young men and women wanting to follow in his footsteps.

“I feel really good about what’s going on out here now,” Mr Gumudrul said.

“The young people are getting jobs and looking up to all us who are out there working.”

Gunbalanya Meats manager Dion Henderson said prime cuts from the meatworks were providing a cheaper food source for people across Western Arnhem Land and that word was spreading fast.

“Everything that comes here’s frozen so to have fresh meat on hand all the time, they like it.”

Mr Henderson predicts a bright future for the meatworks and pastoral operation and says having good staff is the key to any business plan.

“The blokes that are there now are good and reliable. They turn up every day and really get excited about their work. They love sharpening their knives and they love to cut meat.”

Gunbalanya meatworks is also processing buffalo from nearby Hodgson Downs, where up to 5000 buffalo run wild, and has plans the meat to restaurants in Sydney and Melbourne.

http://www.nlc.org.au/media-releases/article/remote-meatworks-revived

Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin



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« Last Edit: Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:31pm by falah »  

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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #83 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:24pm
 
...
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #84 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:31pm
 
Project puts Aboriginal stockmen back in saddle


...

FOR 15 years Aboriginal stockman Adrian Gumurul hunted wild buffalo across the flood plains near Kakadu until they had to be exterminated because of brucellosis in the 1980s.

''It was a great living, free on a horse, but it all fell away,'' he says.

But Mr Gumurul, 52, has returned to the saddle, mustering cattle across the same country in a project that will triple the number of jobs for indigenous workers in his tiny community of Gunbalanya, 320 kilometres east of Darwin.

''Things are changing for the better around here for the first time in years,'' he says. ''Our blokes are getting work like we used to when we were young.''

Under a pilot project brokered by the Northern Land Council, the Indigenous Land Corporation is spending $3.1 million to upgrade and manage the community-owned meatworks.

For years the meatworks slaughtered only a few cattle a week, for local consumption. But now up to 90 cattle a week will be slaughtered in the community, with meat exported to Asia and sent to some of Australia's top restaurants.

Under the project, fences are being rebuilt and and water holes dug to allow the community's existing 1000 cattle herd to be boosted to 8000.

Buffalo and other cattle will also be brought from three properties managed by the Indigenous Land Corporation in the Northern Territory to be slaughtered at the meatworks.

''The old stockmen like me are teaching the young fellas like what used to happen in the old days,'' Mr Gumurul says, standing beside his horse called No Name on a flood plain near the community.

http://nqr.farmonline.com.au/news/state/agribusiness-and-general/general/project...
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #85 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:34pm
 
Indigenous folk grazing cattle in Arnhem land Freeliar:

...

Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin
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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #86 - Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:38pm
 
Meatworks to provide jobs in Arnhem Land


...

The redevelopment of a meatworks in a remote Aboriginal community near Kakadu could create more than 50 local jobs, the Indigenous Land Corporation says...

...Over the next 15 years, the cattle herd there will be increased to 7,000.

The venture will also see young Indigenous people trained as pastoralists and meat processes.

"Young people going to learn to work for their own living, and caring for their own family," cattleman Adrian Gurrumul said.

Northern Land Council chief executive Kim Hill welcomed the venture.

"This meatworks is providing jobs for local peoples and importantly it will also give people access to better food and encourage healthy lifestyles," he said.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2010-11-10/meatworks-to-provide-jobs-in-arnhem-land/2...



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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #87 - Jun 7th, 2012 at 8:35am
 
Quote:
Buffalo is just one example of a type of farming that can be successful in Arnhem Land if Europeans had only managed to conquer the lands.


How many successful water buffalo farms do you know of? How is this any different from your argument that the existence of farms in Indonesia demonstrates the viability of the land for European immigrants? Why would someone go all the way to the frontier to try an experimental farming method of a product for which there is no market?

Quote:
...Over the next 15 years, the cattle herd there will be increased to 7,000.


Falah, the example you gave previously of the farm from that TV show would have over ten times as many cattle. It supports one family. It is hardly a gold mine for european farmers and would have been even harder in the past. I think it's great that the aborigines are working their way up in the world, but don't read too much into it.
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« Last Edit: Jun 7th, 2012 at 8:43am by freediver »  

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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #88 - Jun 7th, 2012 at 11:59am
 
freediver wrote on Jun 7th, 2012 at 8:35am:
Quote:
Buffalo is just one example of a type of farming that can be successful in Arnhem Land if Europeans had only managed to conquer the lands.


How many successful water buffalo farms do you know of? How is this any different from your argument that the existence of farms in Indonesia demonstrates the viability of the land for European immigrants? Why would someone go all the way to the frontier to try an experimental farming method of a product for which there is no market?



Freeliar, buffalo farming is hardly experimental it has been carried out for 5000 years.

There is a huge market for buffalo. It is very popular in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines.

In the Northern Territory buffalo meat is being exported and there are also buffalo dairy farms. 5% of the worlds milk comes from buffalo, and it is used to make mozzarella cheese.


The Northern Territory had a big leather industry relying on buffalo hide until synthetics replaced most use of leather.




Quote:
...Over the next 15 years, the cattle herd there will be increased to 7,000.


Falah, the example you gave previously of the farm from that TV show would have over ten times as many cattle. It supports one family. It is hardly a gold mine for european farmers and would have been even harder in the past. I think it's great that the aborigines are working their way up in the world, but don't read too much into it. [/quote]

Freeliar, that is only one small area of Arnhem Land where the traditional owners are interested in cattle grazing.

There are many other parts of Arnhem Land suitable for cattle grazing:


Quote:
Arnhem Land traditional owners offer cattle lifeline


Traditional owners of land in the Northern Territory are proposing to help cattle left hungry and stranded by the live export ban to Indonesia.

Jonathan Farrell from the Ngukurr area, south east of Katherine, says there is feed and land for up to 100,000 animals after a bumper wet season.

He says the Federal Government should pay to transport livestock to the area in Arnhem Land because they introduced the ban.

"There is a lot of good country, no need for bores, we've got waters everywhere running," Mr Farrell said.

"It will be a good thing for the community and they will be looking forward to it."...

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/07/06/3262707.htm?site=darwin



100,000 cattle in another small part of Arnhem Land.


Imagine how many millions of cattle could be put on the whole of Arnhem Land!


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Re: The glorious aboriginal muslim victory over whitey
Reply #89 - Jun 7th, 2012 at 6:42pm
 
Quote:
The Northern Territory had a big leather industry relying on buffalo hide until synthetics replaced most use of leather


How many of these came from farmed buffalo?

Quote:
Freeliar, that is only one small area of Arnhem Land where the traditional owners are interested in cattle grazing.


Interested? This is 2012 - more than a century after the time you are talking about. More than a century after the evidence you have presented, which largely consists of people talking about the farming potential of this land. And still they are merely talking about it? What does that tell you about the potential profits involved?

Quote:
Jonathan Farrell from the Ngukurr area, south east of Katherine, says there is feed and land for up to 100,000 animals after a bumper wet season.


Again Falah, you seem to prefer to go by what people say the land can support rather than what it can actually support. In this case the guy is not even claiming the land could support that many cattle on a long term basis. It is land on the margins of what was settled by immigrants that, as your article explains, happened to temporarily be suitable for large numbers of cattle at a time when there was a glut of cattle on the market. Even so, the guy was only willing to bring cattle in if the government paid for it. What does that tell you about the potential profits involved?
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