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COSIT
2003
Springer

Landscape Categories in Yindjibarndi: Ontology, Environment, and Language

13 years 9 months ago
Landscape Categories in Yindjibarndi: Ontology, Environment, and Language
This paper describes categories for landscape elements in the language of the Yindjibarndi people, a community of Indigenous Australians. Yindjibarndi terms for topographic features were obtained from dictionaries, and augmented and refined through discussions with local language experts in the Yindjibarndi community. In this paper, the Yindjibarndi terms for convex landforms and for water bodies are compared to English-language terms used to describe the Australian landscape, both in general terms and in the AUSLIG Gazetteer. The investigation found fundamental differences between the two conceptual systems at the basic level, supporting the notion that people from different places and cultures may use different categories for geographic features. Keywords. Geographic categories, geographic ontology, landscape terms, natural language, cultural differences, Yindjibarndi, Indigenous Australians, spatial cognition, geographic information systems, GIS.
David M. Mark, Andrew G. Turk
Added 06 Jul 2010
Updated 06 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where COSIT
Authors David M. Mark, Andrew G. Turk
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