Nyamal
The Nyamal are an Indigenous Australian people of the Pilbara area of north-western Western Australia.
Language
A version of Nyamal became the basis of a pidgin used among workers on pearling luggers in the late 19th century, and was spoken several hundred miles away, as was Ngarluma One Nyamal word has entered English, kaluta, the common term now used to refer to a distinct species of marsupial Dasukaluta rosamondae, mistakenly classified as an antechinus before it was correctly identified in 1982.Country
The Nyamal are a coastal people though their traditional lands extend inland through to the Yarrie country of the De Grey River, the name yari denoting the white ochre on the river banks. It extended east of the Karajarri coastal zone, and from Port Hedland through to Marble Bar and Nullagine, south over the Shaw River, and north over the Oakover River to the borders of Martu tribal lands such as those of the Manyjilyjarra, Wanman, Nyangumarta and Ngarla. Norman Tindale estimated their territorial extension as covering.Bush tucker included mangkurrka cuts from the Punara tree. Two types of kangaroo were hunted, the plain variety and a hill species. The lure of the native fig tee fruit was used to catch both bush turkey, which was trapped in a grass net splayed out in the branches, and emu, which was enticed through an artificial gap in a contrived hedge of bush shrubs, and then fell into spiked ditches dug and then camouflaged with leafage and sand.