Page 3 - Heritage A5 compile
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Prior to the arrival of the Europeans in Australia, Coochiemudlo
               Island was visited by family groups of the coastal clans of the
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               Yuggera people.  On Coochiemudlo Island there was a rich source
               of seafood such as fish, shellfish and crabs, intermittent fresh water,
               pandanus nuts and swamp water fern roots, ochres, and bark for
               shields and canoes. There is evidence of stone tools, shell middens
               and scar trees, so the Yuggera people first used the Emerald Fringe
               up to 20,000 years ago. Mortar and pestle grind stones have been
               found and there are remains of a stone fish trap at the southeast
               corner of the island.  The red ochre stones, which give the island its
               name, would have been used for body decorations and the red
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               pigment for shields and skin.  The name ‘Coochiemudlo’ is derived
               from the Aboriginal words ‘kutchi’ meaning red, and ‘mudlo’ meaning
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               stone.

               On July 19, 1799 Lieutenant Matthew Flinders RN of the HMS
               Norfolk landed on Coochiemudlo Island, his ‘Sixth Island’, noting
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               evidence of dogs, fireplaces and rough temporary shelters.
               Coochiemudlo was one of four landfalls made by Flinders in Moreton












               6  J. Pearn, ‘In the Beginning Aboriginal Forebears on Coochiemudlo Island’,
               in Chronicles of Coochiemudlo, p3.
               7  Jones, ‘Coochiemudlo Island in the Nineteenth Century’, p23
               8  M. Howells, Coochiemudlo – Brief History, Redlands Shire Council, 2001,
               p.1.
               9  Quoted in Pearn, ‘In the Beginning’, p. 15.
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