Price lived in humpies (traditional Aboriginal dwellings) until she was nine and became a mother at thirteen years of age. A victim of domestic violence, she left the father of her child when she was 19 and began studying to be a teacher.
She attained a Bachelor of Applied Science in Aboriginal Community Management and Development from Curtin University and has worked in education and training, public administration, the media, community development, interpreting, translating and language teaching and has experience in small business management.
Price has strongly criticised the high levels of violence in Central Australian indigenous communities and supported the Northern Territory Intervention. Price's public show of support for the Intervention policy instigated by the Howard Government drew criticism from some left-leaning Aboriginal advocates.
>full blood aboriginal woman >lived in huts made of sticks until she was 9 >becomes a teacher and politician >criticizes leftists
The incredible ability is known as "sharper vision" or "super sight". "The super sight is the way their retina and brain is wired, and they are probably like that from childhood," said Professor Hugh Taylor, who pioneered studies into super sight.
"He may have to get a pair of binoculars to see what they see with their naked eye." Good vision is considered 6:6 vision, which means someone standing six metres away from an eye chart can see it as clearly as an average person at six metres away.
But in Aboriginal people it was much better than that. In fact Professor Taylor's studies have shown that some Aboriginal people in the NT, WA and SA had 6:1.4 vision, meaning they could see things from six metres away that an average non-Indigenous person could see only from 1.4m away.
Not all people studied had such high vision, and others were sometimes recording 6:2 or 6:3 vision, which was still far better than is usual for the general population. "The vision of the Aboriginal people, the fineness of their vision, is better than has been reported anywhere else in the world," he said.
sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0010028581900177 Visual spatial memory was investigated in Australian Aboriginal children of desert origin. Aboriginal children, from 6 to 17 years, performed at significantly higher levels than white Australian children on the tasks. Item type did not affect scores of Aboriginal children, while for white Australian children familiar items were easier than less familiar, which, if potentially nameable, were easier than items unable to be differentiated by name.
Like other populations outside Africa, the Australian Aboriginal man owes small chunks of his genome to Neanderthals4. More surprisingly, though, his ancestors also interbred with another archaic human population known as the Denisovans.
Beauty is skin deep. By the way, you're an ugly troll.
Ryan Moore
Please archive
>abc net au/news/2015-04-08/prince-harry-may-struggle-to-keep-up-with-aboriginal-super-sight/6378066 archive.is/AVhQT
Eli White
sm h.com.au/technology/sci-tech/aboriginal-stories-of-sea-level-rise-preserved-for-thousands-of-years-20150212-13d3rz.html
Details of life before and after this significant sea rise, which flooded areas around the Australian coast that were previously dry land, were recorded in the oral histories of the continent's Indigenous people.
Nunn and his linguist colleague Dr Nick Reid have collected more than a dozen stories from different clans around the country that refer to the inundation of the coast.
Given there have been no major changes in sea level since this time, Nunn and Reid suggest this story and others are at least 7000 years old and may have been preserved for several hundred generations.
While both scholars admit details may not be very precise, and it would be unwise to assume all stories are based on truth, they are confident at least 16 stories are based on real observations because they all recall the same thing - the sea rising.
There's the story about the once-dry Port Phillip Bay being a place kangaroos grazed. It has been recorded by three independent sources. Other histories refer to offshore islands on the west coast like Rottnest, Carnac and Garden being part of the mainland between 7500 and 9000 years ago, when the sea level was about eight metres lower than it is now.
Impressive, she must be an outlier, most of them seem dumb as rocks.
Blake Robinson
Reginald Walter "Reg" Saunders, MBE was the first Aboriginal Australian to be commissioned as an officer in the Australian Army.
Following the invasion of Crete in May 1941, the 2/7th Battalion was initially employed in a coastal defence role, before taking part in the fighting around Canea. After this, it took part in a devastating bayonet charge at 42nd Street, along with the New Zealand Maori Battalion, which killed almost 300 Germans and briefly checked their advance. It was during this battle that Saunders killed his first opponent:
>"... I saw a German soldier stand up in clear view about thirty yards [30 m] away. He was my first sure kill ... I can remember for a moment that it was just like shooting a kangaroo ... just as remote."
The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929) Sat 3 Oct 1925 Page 9
AN ABORIGINAL INTELLECTUAL.
For a twentieth century citizen to be suddenly confronted with a man from the Stone Age would be an ex- perience sufficiently piquant. But suppose, faced with the Stone Age man, he addressed you in cultured tones and proceeded to discuss the harnessing of gravity and the poetry of Milton? Your feelings would be probably somewhat similar to those of the reporter who interviewed David Unaipon on his visit to Adelaide this week.
A full-blooded aboriginal, Mr. Unaipon presents in physical structure an unmis- takeable resemblance to those reconstruc- tions of the older human types which scien- tists have sometimes supplied with the help of a tooth and a mouldering jawbone. Only the eyes, flashing with quick thought, lim- pid, friendly, give the lie to your impres- sion. In manner, he is courteous and dignified, and an almost English purity of accent characterises his cultured voice.
Born at Point McLeay, David Unaipon soon passed far beyond the limits of mis- sion education. Through the kindly in- terest of an Adelaide family, he was given the password to the magic land of books, and developed a passionate interest in the wonders of science. A little coaching and much private study developed in him a truly remarkable intellect, and to-day he displays gifts which many Europeans might envy.
Nathaniel Sullivan
>Bachelor of Applied Science in Aboriginal Community Management and Development
>"This is how you throw the vodka-infused bananas, you have to get the right angle"
A DNA Search for the First Americans Links Amazon Groups to Indigenous Australians
The latest genetic analyses back up skeletal studies suggesting that some groups in the Amazon share a common ancestor with indigenous Australians and New Guineans.
Three Amazonian groups—Suruí, Karitiana and Xavante—all had more in common with Australasians than any group in Siberia.
At first sight I'd also guess it was a pre-HS, but on second look there are a number of diagnostic features that point out it's human. The eyebrows look massive, but note that it's actually only the individual eye arches themselves that are more pronounced. In neanderthals, the brow ridge continues across the nasal bridge (giving it more of a monobrow, so to say). Similarly, neanderthals have a more vertical face.
While they do have a more pronounced 'snout', which this individual also has, their face (nose, upper lip area) is actually similarly arranged as average humans, which you can see in the orientation of the nose. Anyway, for facial angle you use the zygomatic arch (that cheeckbone thing on the side), which you have to keep horizontal. In this picture, the lower edge jaw is used to suggest inclination, further doctored by a dislocation of the lower jaw joint (which also gives this photo more of a primitive look, because the teeth don't align).
In general, if you look at all the 'primitive' features, it appears that it's actually just an exaggeration, or an increased roughness, of the features. This individual is simply extremely robust, and thus falls within normal human variation. Neanderthals generally have smoother skull features.
Also, the most significant differences between the specimens in OP's picture are actually sexual differences. The skull on the right is obviously a gracile female, whereas the skull on the left is a male.
It is true that generally, males have more primitive features (among them the snout, and generally a rougher skull for the extra strong muscle attachments), while females have, on average, more neotanal features (retention of childlike features) due to different ages of peaking growth hormones.
Isaiah Torres
Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu
A full blood Aboriginal man from Elcho Island, Northern Territory. Award winning musician. Blind since birth he taught him self how to play the guitar.
Listen abbofag you're trying way too hard, you're just coming off butthurt cause your people never amounted to anything noteworthy. No one is saying there aren't a few exceptional abbos out there but it is painfully obvious that they never created anything that stood the test of time, all they did is survive and then accomplish a few things with lots of help from whitey.
Jason Turner
>a Serbian a disgusting race
Aboriginals are honorary Aryans while your people are subhumans
>Two South Australian Ngarrindjeri soldiers, George Karpany and Proctor Wilson, were given the ultimate accolade when they were called ‘jolly fine fellows and white, clear white inside’,
>In the case of Karpany and Wilson, Kipling’s quotation appeared beside a photograph of the two Aboriginal men. In a variation of this usage, William ‘Mick’ King, an Aboriginal man from New South Wales, was praised with the words ‘Although he was black he was a White man and a dinkum Aussie’.
>the bizarre situation whereby a strange collection of Australian extremist right- wing, ultra-nationalists, some of whom were ardent admirers of Adolf Hitler and the German Nazi Party, became strong advocates and supporters of the Aboriginal rights movement of the 1930s. Furthermore, their romanticised notion of Aboriginal people derived from their belief that Aboriginal people were the original Aryan race.
>But earlier still in 1925 he had written a draft of a novel called The Settlers where within he put forward the theory that 'the Aryan race began in Australia. Australia is the original home of the white man (and the white race)'.
It's left their cultural tapestry and identity broken. It's left them poor, planted with seeds of discrimination and stuck in cycles of self inflicting abuse.
There's only broken remnants of purity left and most of their genes have been stirred into the anglo dynasty.
It's a sad situation and i truly believe the first settlers should have ended it swiftly rather than let them linger. They will forever be ostracised and held at a distance due to uncomfortable topic of land ownership and the fact that most are perceived to be broken criminals.
Isaiah Stewart
...
Robert Brooks
>Serbian >race Stop huffing so much petrol your brain is already u underdeveloped as it is seeing as you are an abbo and all.
Jayden Rivera
>>Serbian >>race you're right I meant to say sub-species
Joshua Stewart
>a Serbian >a disgusting race >Aboriginals are honorary Aryans while your people are subhumans
Top Kek I like this abo.
Jacob Kelly
A relative of him came and talked to me while I was waiting for a bus in Adelaide. She was extremely proud of him, but it was definitely a case of reversion to the mean
Connor Brooks
Beautiful? No. People? I'm not sure.
William Parker
A related thing is the way they complain when watching films projected onto a screen, that it's "too slow". They can see the rapid switching between the frames that just blurs into one for our human eyes. I was told this by an anthropologist who'd done fieldwork among the Aruntja or whatver they're called.
Colton Young
> A cherrypicked member of minority group did something completly ordinary for a regular white person > Look, there's literally zero differences between us and them!
Well, good for her I guess, but what does it prove?
Lucas Anderson
>completly ordinary for a regular white person >Price lived in humpies (traditional Aboriginal dwellings)
Cooper Jackson
Has she critisized the gibs?
Isaac James
You know what I meant
Josiah Mitchell
>has child >leaves the father to become a single mother
Tell me why you thought Sup Forums would approve of this.
Landon Richardson
Oh boy, your retard - I mean abbo - is showing and it's disgusting to be quite frank. Anyways let this thread die you'll just hate being an abbo by the time the mental rape is done.