A99: Norseman

AIATSIS code: 
A99
AIATSIS reference name: 
Norseman

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Name
Thesaurus heading language
Thesaurus heading people
ABN name
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ABS name
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Horton name
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Ethnologue name
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ISO 639-3 code
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Tindale name
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Tindale (1974)
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O'Grady et al (1966)
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Glottocode
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Other sources
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Synonyms
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Comment
Comments: 

Von Brandenstein (1980:2) identifies Norseman as one of six language varieties in the Dundas District area (the others being Mirning (Eucla) A9, Marlba A110, Fraser Range A74, Windaga A111 and Kallaagu A2. He does comment, though, that 'it will be difficult to extract the different components of the Dundas District languages ... from the mixed language now called Ngadju A3 which is still spoken...' and notes that Norseman is covered by the area identified as Gala:gu A2 by O'Grady in Capell (1963).

Von Brandenstein may have collected data (1966, 1970, 1970). However, with so little information (no name is given, only a locational descriptor) and no language data, Norseman is described as Unconfirmed.

 

References: 
  • Brandenstein, Carl G. von. 1966. Report on research... carried out for the A.I.A.S. PMS 2142.
  • Brandenstein, Carl G. von. 1970. Report [to A.I.A.S.] on field work conducted JulyAugust 1970 as part of the 1969/1970 project Western Desert fringe study. PMS 2140.
  • Brandenstein, Carl G. von. 1970. Report to the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies on field work conducted September - December 1970 as part of the 1969/1970 project Western Desert fringe study (PMS 2143)
  • Brandenstein, Carl G. von. 1980. Ngadjumaja: an Aboriginal language of south-east Western Australia. Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachwissen-schaft der Universität Innsbruck.
Status: 
Unconfirmed
Location
State / Territory: 
WA
Location information: 

From Norseman to Fraser Range (von Brandenstein 1980:2).

Maps: 
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Links
Programs
Activities: 
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People: 
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Indigenous organisations: 
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Speakers
Year Source Speaker numbers
1975Oates-
1984Senate-
1990Schmidt-
1996Census-
2001Census-
2004NILS1-
2005Estimate-
2006Census-
2011Census-
2014NILS2
2016Census-
2018-2019NILS3

Speaker numbers were measured differently across the censuses and various other sources listed in AUSTLANG. You are encouraged to refer to the sources.

Speaker numbers for ‘NILS 2004’ and ‘2005 estimate’ come from 'Table F.3: Numbers of speakers of Australian Indigenous languages (various surveys)' in 'Appendix F NILS endangerment and absolute number results' in McConvell, Marmion and McNicol 2005, pages 198-230 (PDF, 2.5MB).

Documentation
Type Documentation Status Documentation Score
Word list None 0
Text Collection None 0
Grammar None 0
Audio-visual None 0
Manuscript note: 
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Grammar: 
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Dictionary: 
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Classification
Source Family Group Sub-group Name Relationship
Ethnologue (2005)          
Dixon (2002)          
Wurm (1994)          
Walsh (1981)          
Oates (1975) Pama-Nyungan Pilbara-Nyungar (Southwest) Mirninj (Ngadju) Norseman  
Wurm (1972)          
O'Grady, Voegelin and Voegelin (1966)