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Drawing on your lectures and tutorial reading, summarise the main developments in the destruction of Aboriginal societies in Queensland. The aboriginal society in Australia, Queensland specifically, has been decimated and reduced to nothing but nihilistic group of people. The first settler contact was made in 1606 and this would later set a tale of devastation for the Aboriginal population demonstrated by the: murders, massacres, disease, starvation and many more atrocities that were committed against the Aboriginal society. Over a period of 123 years between 1788 and 1911 there had been a 97% decline in aboriginal population whilst during that period settler’s population grew exponentially from a figure of 0 in 1788 to 4.5 million by 1911 in Australia. The aboriginal population in Queensland had been reduced from 250 000 people in 1824 to 25 000 in 1890 subsequently this was owing to the slaughter of tribes and treatment of aborigines as game to be hunted by the settler. A. Palmer, “Colonial Genocide”, Queensland – Case of Genocide, Chapter 3, Crawford House (2000),41-63.The Karuwali tribe contributed to the death count but until 1868 they had gone untouched by the arrival of British settlers in Australia 80 years earlier. Pamela Lunkin Watson, “Passed Away?”: The Fate of the Karuwali, Chapter 7 in D. Moses edition “Genocide and Settler” (2004),175.This paper seeks to construct the main developments in the destruction of Aboriginal societies in Queensland. This will be elaborated on by using the contextual piece of Watson’s ‘Passed Away? The Fate of the Karuwali’ to explicate the case of the Karuwali tribe, one of many that were living in far Southwest Queensland and will thus illustrate the atrocities that were committed to them and to the greater portion of the Aboriginal population. The aborigines of Australia begun as a small scale social group residing in the regions of Australia for approximately 50-60 000 years. They were considered to be hunter and gatherers who lived off the natural inhabitants of the land and before the Europeans arrived there were said to be close to a million with at least 90 language groups in Queensland. M. Adhikari, “Genocide on Settler Frontiers: When Hunter-gatherer and Commercial Stock Farmers Clash”, UNESCO (2014).As a result, the intrusion by Costello and Durak by 1872 had led to an accumulation of more than 17 000 square miles of tribal land without any payment with the continual expansion, leaving a disintegration of aboriginal communities with sever lows numbers due to the direct presence of settlers and the fatal changes they introduced. Watson,”Passed Away?”, 175-177.The pastoral impact was also a contributor to the destruction of the aboriginal people through their exertion of the environment where their harvesting and farming animals disturbed the aboriginal way of living. An account of the explorer J. McKinley states that a herd of expeditionary animals inhibited the access to fish, one of the main food sources for the aboriginal people. Other patrols herds of sheep, cows etc. had a calamitous impact on the food and water supply where they were cases of eggs and nests of water-birds getting smashed and the ruin of food plants resulting in starvation. Ibid.Settlers became violent in gaining possession of the land. They needed to maintain the exclusion of indigenous people to display their superiority and notion of authority over them. There was an uprising of random killings between the mid 1850’s into the 1860’s of thousands of aboriginal people based on discursive reasoning that had no relation to the outcome. Killing became a sport and Aboriginals were hunted like animals. Raymond Evans, “Plenty Shoot Em”: The destruction of Aboriginal Societies along the Queensland Frontier, Chapter 6 in D. Moses edition “Genocide and Settler” (2004),155-157.The failure to prosecute settler offenders meant that the carnage would continue without anyone challenging them… until the first prosecution in 1883 where the offenders sentencing was reduced anyway to a few months instead of years. Ibid, 168. One of the most prominent detachment of human dignity and perhaps the main contributor to the tally of deaths was rape which not only had the physiological effect on women but introduced the spread of venereal diseases consequently leading to a declining birth rate which in effect restricted the spread of culture to the next generation as well. Subsequently today there are no Karuwali people that live in Karuwali land or in nearby towns and their language and culture disappeared before it could even be recorded; only a handful of individuals claim some heritage. There paper has therefore demonstrated the contributors of the decimation of Aboriginal population in Queensland and identified that the settlers were the main reason for the development of the destruction of the Aboriginal society. Bibliography M. Adhikari, “Genocide on Settler Frontiers: When Hunter-gatherer and Commercial Stock Farmers Clash”, UNESCO (2014). Raymond Evans, “Plenty Shoot Em”: The destruction of Aboriginal Societies along the Queensland Frontier, Chapter 6 in D. Moses edition “Genocide and Settler” (2004),155-157. A. Palmer, “Colonial Genocide”, Queensland – Case of Genocide, Chapter 3, Crawford House (2000),41-63. Pamela Lunkin Watson, “Passed Away?”: The Fate of the Karuwali, Chapter 7 in D. Moses edition “Genocide and Settler” (2004),175.