Ethnoclassification and the Environment in Northern Australia
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Baker, Brett
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North Australian Research Unit (NARU)
Abstract
The systems of ethnobiological classification that we find in Indigenous societies in Northern Australia are quite different in two major respects from those more familiar to speakers of non-Indigenous languages. Firstly, the vast majority of simple names denote species, rather than genera. Secondly, all names for taxa are simple names, there is no possibility of compounding specific+generic names in most Australian languages that have been described in order to create a taxa-denoting term. So we don't find anything like 'silky oak' or 'white pine', where the first element identifies a species (or more specific kind) of the genus (or general kind) denoted by the second element ('oak', 'pine').
I argue that the first fact follows from the nature of the biological environment in Australia, in particular, the dominance of a handful of large genera such as Eucalyptus, Acacia and Melaleuca. The second fact in part follows from the first, but in other respects is simply a reflection of broader characteristics of 'names' in Australian languages. Both of these characteristics are problematic for universalist theories of ethnoclassification such as that of Berlin and associates
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