Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/124989
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dc.contributor.authorSchultz, Chester-
dc.date.issued2020-03-05-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2440/124989-
dc.description.abstractPangkalla or Pangkarla (New Spelling Pangkala or Pangkarla) might probably be the Kaurna name for an area around the lowest reaches of the Bungala River near the mouth (Sections 1012, 1014, 1015, and 260). The creek flows through today’s town of Yankalilla about 4 km from the mouth, and enters the sea at Normanville. The name ‘Bungala’ was originally obtained in 1839-40 by the first surveyors of this part of District F (Kentish and Poole), no doubt from Kaurna-speaking Aboriginal guides whom they brought with them from Adelaide. Phonetically the original Kaurna word could very likely be the Kaurna word Pangkarla, ‘two lagoons’.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherChester Schultzen
dc.subjectPangkallaen
dc.subjectPangkalaen
dc.subjectBungala Riveren
dc.subjectNormanvilleen
dc.subjectKaurna languageen
dc.subjectAboriginal place-namesen
dc.subjectSouth Australia geographyen
dc.subjectKaurna Warra Pintyandien
dc.subjectYankalillaen
dc.subjectMaikabanangken
dc.subjectNgarrindjeri languageen
dc.subjectTjelbrukeen
dc.titlePangkarla and Aboriginal history around Normanville and the Bungala Riveren
dc.title.alternativePlace Name Summary (PNS) 5.02.01/01en
dc.typeTexten
Appears in Collections:Southern Kaurna Place Names Essays

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