152 Records of the S.A. Museum 



2Q2 WULURUTERKANANI (Diari Tribe). To the place of the 

 Wukiru bird. So called because the female Muramura, Ng-uturini, once saw a 

 Wuluru bird here. The Toa represents the head of the bird. 



293. MARLURANI. As the Muramura, Kirlawilina, once sat with his 

 uncle at this ])lace there came out of a hole in a hill a wonderfully beautiful 

 g\r\ wearing a white head-band «hich the Muramura desired to possess. The 

 vertical part of the Toa represents the girl emerging from the hill, the white 

 band near the top denoting the head-band. 



294. KIRRATINTINI (Diari Tribe). To the place of the unfinished 

 boomerang (kirra). Here the people of the Muramura, Pirnawarankana, once 

 began to make boomerangs, but only half completed them because they were in 

 a hurry. The Toa represents a partly finished boomerang, and the red bands 

 on it watercourses on the plain. 



295. KAWOLKAMUDLANI (Diari Tribe). To where the crows sit 

 on the end of the hill. The Xoa represents a sandhill overgrown with bushes 

 (red spots), at one end of which the Muramura, Ditjiminka, saw many crows 

 sitting. Crows' feathers are attached. 



296. MANIWALKUNI (Diari Tribe). To the place where emu feathers 

 were smeared with red ochre and fat. \\'hite represents a plain where the 

 female Muramura, Manuwalkunini, once sat and smeared emu feathers with 

 red ochre and fat. A tuft of such feathers is attached. 



297. KAWOLKATJARINI (Diari Tribe). To the young crow. Here, 

 on a tree in a plain, the Muramura, Kuritjuruna, once found a crow's nest 

 containing young birds ; hence the name, and the crows' feathers on the Toa. 

 The red stripes are watercourses. 



298. KANTALPANI (Diari Tribe). To the place covered with Malka 

 grass (Malka kanta), a tuft of which is afifixed to the Toa. Here the female 

 Muramura, Marnmarumi, once hid herself by day in high grass of this kind, 

 and only went down the hill in the evening to fetch water from a neighbouring 

 waterhole. The white, rounded head of the Toa represents the hill. 



299. WIRRAPANTUNI (Diari Tribe). To the lake where Wirra 

 bushes grow. The head nf the Toa represents the lake, which has red shores, 

 and twigs (jf Wirra bush are attached. Named 1;)}- the Muramura, Darana, on 

 account of the ])resence of these bushes. 



300. MARDALBURUNI (Diari Tribe). To the i)lace bestrewn with 

 sinall stones. 'Vhe wliite head represents a waterhole, an tlie banks of which 

 the female Muramura, Wittimarkani, once found many Muall, sharp stones 



