What appeared to be a pile of rocks in a shed turns out to be a collection of important Indigenous artefacts that has sent this farming family on a quest to preserve cultural heritage.
Daughter of missing WA man 'looks for Daddy' every day
The family of Pilbara man Zane Stevens believes someone knows something a month after the 21-year-old's disappearance near Broome.
Photo shows Man, woman holding little girl wearing pink standing on a beach.Linda Burney discusses Reconcilliation Week following the Voice referendum
Minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney, discusses Reconciliation Week following the defeat of the Voice referendum.
Photo shows Indigenous Affairs Minister Linda Burney speaks during a sit-down television interview.Has Video Duration: 3 minutes 26 seconds.'Truly a coming-home' for Kaurna artefacts returned from German museum after 180 years
Almost 200 years after Indigenous artefacts were gifted to Lutheran missionaries, the items have been ceremonially handed back to the Kaurna people.
Photo shows Aboriginal artefacts on display in Adelaide.David Gulpilil's repatriation home documented in new film
The final journey of one of Australia's most celebrated actors, David Gulpilil has been captured for a new documentary.
Photo shows Journey Home Documentary, David Gulpilil: Face of young Indigenous man with facial paint and traditional adornments.Has Video Duration: 1 minute 59 seconds.Remote op shop initiative wins NT Rural Women's Award
An op shop project which donates clothes to Indigenous communities is set to expand after its win at the 2024 NT Agrifutures awards.
Photo shows Tanya Egerton NT rural womens award pictured leaning on the front of her truck.Students switch off the tech to connect with country in WA
A program designed to reawaken the connection between children and nature is getting primary school students away from technology and into the bush.
Photo shows A student looking through binocularsIs the council meeting opening prayer a human rights violation?
About a third of Victorian councils still open meetings with a Christian prayer, but at least one council has voted to ditch it after receiving a complaint claiming its inclusion violates the Victorian Human Rights and Responsibilities Charter.
Photo shows The Australian flag and a crucifixInvasion Day marches sweep the country
Many First Nations people and their supporters marked January 26 with Invasion Day marches and survival day events.
Has Video Duration: 2 minutes 6 seconds.Kakadu National Park traditional owners take Parks Australia to High Court
Four years ago Parks Australia violated the wishes of traditional owners of Gunlom Falls, in the Kakadu National Park, and the matter has now reached the highest court.
Has Video Duration: 6 minutes 30 seconds.US museum returns Indigenous man's stolen remains to WA after 126 years
Yawuru traditional owners have welcomed home the remains of an ancestor stolen from their lands and held in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC.
Photo shows Two men taking two large boxes out of a larger wooden box and placing them on the ground.A new breed of super-fit athlete is discovering the rugged trails of Victoria's Grampians and climbers aren't happy
Western Victoria's jagged Grampians mountains have long been a favoured destination for hikers and climbers, but they're also emerging as a must for a new type of fitness fanatic.
Photo shows two runners on the top of a mountain ridge in regional victoria'Kick in the guts' Aboriginal elder outraged by scrapping of the Acknowledgements of Country
The Kaurna community is angry with the decision by the two South Australian councils, with the Shadow Minister for Indigenous Australians saying the move is telling about the climate in Australia.
Has Video Duration: 1 minute 54 seconds.This area was once targeted by miners. It's now on track to be a national park
The 2.5-billion-year-old Helena and Aurora Range is on track to join its namesake national park, due to expand significantly with the Mount Manning Conservation Park's addition.
Photo shows Banded Ironstone outcrop Bungalbin East, Yilgarn region, WACouncillor loses bid to scrap 'tokenistic' Welcome to Country protocols amid Indigenous backlash
A local government in Western Australia's South West has rejected a controversial proposal to abolish ceremonies that pay tribute to Aboriginal people.
Photo shows A bald man in a dark coloured suit looks directly at the camera.Questions over travel, business expenses as Aboriginal corporation AGM boils over
East Kimberley traditional owners say MG Corporation has cut back support for scholarships and funerals, amid concerns over travel and business expenses incurred by its leadership.
Photo shows two aboriginal men leave a buildingTraditional owners allege prominent Aboriginal corporation breached rules during chair's vote
Lawford Benning is a well-known Indigenous advocate in the East Kimberley, but some traditional owners have been left angry and hurt by the circumstances surrounding his re-appointment in 2022 as MG Corporation's executive chair.
Photo shows A man with a long-sleeved shirt stands next to a cotton crop.It looks like an oasis, but the Riverlea development has been harbouring a secret
On the one hand, is a $3 billion development to accommodate thousands of families. On the other, is a burial site that is of immeasurable cultural significance. The problem? They are both on the same ground.
Photo shows The Riverlea housing project at Buckland Park in Adelaide's north.Miwatj Yolngu art exhibition tackling truth-telling and global warming
A group of Yolngu elders and artists travelled from Arnhem Land to regional NSW to open an art exhibition focusing on truth telling and global warming.
Has Video Duration: 1 minute 36 seconds.Aboriginal elders make 'difficult' decision to relocate ancestral remains found at housing development
The ancestral remains of at least 27 people will be re-buried at a location near the $3 billion Riverlea development in Adelaide's north where they were found earlier this year.
Photo shows Riverlea'No shame': Pair found guilty of using oily handprints to damage sacred Uluru cave art
The two New South Wales men, who claim to be sovereign citizens, were fined almost $9,000 each for entering and vandalising the prohibited site.
Photo shows The sun sets over Uluru.