Information
The Nangaanya-ku Claimants identify as Wangkayi (or Wongatha) people and/or Spinifex people.
The social world of the Nangaanya-ku people, as well as the body of traditional laws and customs that sustains it (otherwise known as the Tjukurrpa) is firmly rooted in Western Desert tradition. The concept of Tjukurrpa is a central feature of the Western Desert and is the source of the traditional laws and customs adhered to by the Nangaanya-ku people and governs their religious practices, social rules, systems of land tenure and other aspects of their lives.
They speak various Western Desert language dialects, such as Ngaanyatjarra, Pitjantjatjara and Wongatha, itself an amalgamation of dialects created by the mission system in the Goldfields.
The Country holds a series of salt lakes, including Lake Yeo in the north, Lake Rason in the centre, Lake Minigwal in the southwest and the Plumridge Lakes in the southeast. The sand plain country covering the rest of the Nangaanya-ku Part A Determination Area is predominantly vegetated by mulga with occasional rocky outcrops and escarpments. There are three nature reserves.
The first European to explore country within the Application Area was David Carnegie in 1894, followed by Frank Hann in 1903.
Determinations:
Consent determinations –
Part A 29 November 2021.
Part B – TBD