Rivers might have different names today and Australian maps have forgotten whole Countries, but this always was, always will be, Aboriginal land, Aboriginal waters.
We acknowledge the many ancestral Countries and waters that we are connected to. We honour Traditional Owners and pay our respect to Elders and future communities.
The principal working themes – weaving and rivers – naturally expand towards topics like rights of nature, sustainability, food security, consumption, pollution, biodiversity, extinction and ancestral technologies.
This publication sheds light on an important and urgent subject and highlights the deep connections that Australia has to its waterways and bodies of water.
The book follows the logic of a glossary, using approximately 80 terms as headings and 'definitions' such as creek, dam, estuary, flood, weave and weft.
A Glossary of Water has been printed sustainably on excess paper stock of different types and weights from previous book projects, rather than recycled paper, giving the profile of the publication the look and feel of the sediment of the river.
PHASE TRANSITIONS DAVID HAINES AND JOYCE HINTERDING, 2021
Petrichor—from Greek petra, stone, and ichor, the blood from Greek gods—is a term coined in 1964 by Australian scientists Isabel Joy Bear and Richard Thomas to name the smell of the first rain on dry, warm earth.