Dalla people
The Dalla, also known as Jinibara, are an indigenous Australian people of southern Queensland whose tribal lands lay close to Brisbane.
Language
The term Dalla refers to a variety of staghorn fern. The language itself was closely related to the Gubbi Gubbi language.Country
Dalla lands, estimated by Norman Tindale to encompass around, were centred on the hinterland ranges just north of Brisbane, such as the D'Aguilar, Glass House, Blackall and Jimna ranges west of the present-day Sunshine Coast. The territory encompassed Nanango, ran east to Nambour, Palmwoods, Durundur, including the upper Brisbane River and the headwaters of the Mary River. To their west were the Wakka Wakka people, the Gubbi Gubbi were to their north, divided from them by the Mary River. East towards the coast was the southern Undanbi clan of the Ningy Ningy who, together with the Djindubari on Bribie Island, the Dalla referred to as 'Saltwater people'.Social system
The Dalla traditionally comprised five clans:- Dalla. These inhabited the headwaters of the Mary and Brisbane rivers
- The Dungidau, centred in the Kilcoy region
- The Nalbo inhabited the eastern foothills from Eumundi south as far as Beerwah and Caboolture.
- The Dungibara were on the Upper Pine River and the D'Aguilar Range.
- The Garumga lay west of the Brisbane River as far as Crows Nest and the Cooyar Range, with a southern limit at Esk.
Food
The ripeness of bunya nuts was signaled by the onset of bark loss in stands of sugar and white gums. Messages were sent to relatives and nearby tribes to meet up and feast on the harvested nuts at bush clearing set in the mountains as Baroon Pocket, a site described as a paradise in the wilderness by a German missionary who saw it, and one now flooded out by the Baroon Pocket Dam. This intertribal feasting was reciprocated by the coastal peoples who, when the Blue Mountain lorikeets showed up on the Brisbane river, who alert hinterland tribes like the Dalla that mullet were now running in the bay, ready for fishing. The Dalla would camp on the shores of Moreton Bay and join the culling, which included huge quantities of oysters, so plentiful that they were dredged up by the ton to be burnt for lime when whites settled there.
History of contact with whites
A late attempt at salvage ethnology undertaken by Lindsay Page Winterbotham who, supported and advised by Norman Tindale, conducted over several years in-depth interviews with a Jinibara man, Gaiarbau which resulted in a massive manuscript conserving Dalla traditions and music which, on failing to get published, he entrusted to the Queensland Museum.- Ngoera
- Jarbu
- Jinibara
- ''Djunggidjau''
Notable people
- Dundalli