A soakage, or soak, is a source of water in
Australian deserts.
It is called thus because the water generally seeps into the sand, and is stored below, sometimes as part of an
ephemeral river or creek.
Aboriginal water source
Soakages were traditionally important sources of water for
Aboriginal Australians
Aboriginal Australians are the various Indigenous peoples of the Mainland Australia, Australian mainland and many of its islands, such as Tasmania, Fraser Island, Hinchinbrook Island, the Tiwi Islands, and Groote Eylandt, but excluding the T ...
in the desert, being the most dependable source in times of
drought in Australia.
Aboriginal peoples would scoop out the sand or mud using a
coolamon or
woomera, often to a depth of several metres, until clean water gathered in the base of the hole. Knowing the precise location of each soakage was extremely valuable knowledge. It is also sometimes called a native well.
Anthropologist
Donald Thomson wrote:
Cleaning and maintaining the well
Wells were covered to keep them free from fouling by animals. This involved blocking the well with dead branches and uprooted trees. When the wells fell into disrepair, people would bail the well, using the coolamon to throw
slush against the wall. This would set like a
cement
A cement is a binder, a chemical substance used for construction that sets, hardens, and adheres to other materials to bind them together. Cement is seldom used on its own, but rather to bind sand and gravel (aggregate) together. Cement m ...
wash and help to hold loose sand, preventing it from falling into the water.
Wells could be up to fifteen feet deep, with small toe holds cut into the walls.
Recording well locations
Donald Thomson writes:
White explorers and the wells
In the nineteenth century, both
Warburton and
Carnegie recorded that they had run down Aboriginal residents with camels and captured and chained them to compel them to reveal their secret sources of water. This action left a lasting impression on Aboriginal residents of desert regions, who would have handed accounts of this down through successive generations.
In the 1930s, when H. H. Finlayson made his journeys through the desert by camel, he noted that a gelded male camel, after a hard three-and-a-half-day journey in intense heat without water, drank by actual measure without stopping, and fifteen minutes later, another .
This sheds light on the resentment built up among the Aboriginal population against explorers for the exploitation and, by enlarging well entrances and digging out springs, the devastation of their precious water supplies to satisfy camel teams.
Don McLeod (Aboriginal rights activist, see
Pilbara#20th century) also tells a story of clashes over soak water at the time of the gold rushes in Western Australia:
McLeod relates a story told to him by an old prospector by the name of Long, observing an Aboriginal man and woman:
See also
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Bindibu Expedition
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Canning Stock Route
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Claypan
*
Groundwater
Groundwater is the water present beneath Earth's surface in rock and soil pore spaces and in the fractures of rock formations. About 30 percent of all readily available freshwater in the world is groundwater. A unit of rock or an unconsolidat ...
*
Waterhole
*
Soak dike
References
External links
Us Mob - Finding water in the desert
{{Indigenous Australians
Geography of Australia
History of Indigenous Australians
Australian Aboriginal bushcraft
Australian English
Water
Hydrology
Aquifers
Water wells
Exploration of Western Australia
Agriculture in Australia
Water supply and sanitation in Australia