MeisterEckhart wrote on Sep 5
th, 2023 at 9:48am:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Sep 4
th, 2023 at 10:31pm:
When British settlers in the early 19th century finally reached the central coast of Western Australia, they were stunned to find some tribes of Aboriginal peoples who were tall, fairer-skinned and fairer-eyed than any Aboriginals encountered in Australia. Also, male-pattern baldness - unheard-of in other Aboriginal communities.
Their language, it was later discovered, included Dutch words in its lexicon.
There were at least 200 Europeans who were known to have been marooned in Western Australia (possibly more). They were never seen again by their European compatriots.
Evidence of their fate appears (at least for some) to have been preserved by their passing on their DNA.
There are myths passed on within some Aboriginal tribes in Western Australia that dead ancestors, (whose skin had turned white and whose hair had lightened), returned to their people in boats that had sailed from the moon.
It is true - I have seen it - Gascoyne Aborigines
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/subscribe/news/1/?sourceCode=TAWEB_WRE170_a_GGL&dest=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theaustralian.com.au%2Fnational-affairs%2Findigenous%2Fshipwrecked-dutch-sailors-survived-to-bear-families-in-wa%2Fnews-story%2F87a6266b188827a281f0c151ffc022d6&memtype=anonymous&mode=premium&v21=dynamic-groupa-control-noscore&V21spcbehaviour=append
Legacy etched in faces of kin
The craggy cliffs and surging waves of Western Australia’s coastline hold the secrets of a Dutch diaspora, an unwritten history of shipwrecked mariners whose genes may have brushed the faces of Kathy Kickett and her younger sister Lilly. Their mother Rachael Mallard says her 79-year-old father Bill, and his father before him, handed down stories of their Nanda tribal ancestors encountering stranded Dutch mariners. They moved in with their people and produced offspring with fair complexions and blue or green eyes.
23 Apr 2016 — Rachael has always known there is Dutch blood in their Aboriginal family, she just didn't realise it dated back to the early 1600s when as many ...