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  1. www.sport.nsw.gov.au › traditional-indigenous-games › gorriGorri | NSW Government

    Gorri. Background. Bowl-ball or disc games were played by Aboriginal boys and men in all parts of Australia. For example, in the disc-rolling game common throughout Western Australia a piece of rounded bark (disc) was rolled by one of the players for the other boys to aim at.

  2. Gorri was a disc-bowling game played in central Australia. Short description. This is a game involving the throwing of a ball (for a spear) at a moving target. • A group of players of up to 20 or more. Playing area. 0 metres long. Markers are placed at each end of the area, and throws may only be made by players when the target is between.

  3. 30 de mar. de 2024 · ¡El puerto de Armintza está enloquecido con la llegada de Gorri, una adorable foca que ha conquistado los corazones de todos con su simpatía! Desde que Gorri hizo su aparición, el lugar se ha convertido en el centro de atención, con multitudes acudiendo para ver de cerca a esta encantadora criatura marina.

  4. 10 de nov. de 2020 · Today, with the help of Aboriginal elders, these games have been kept alive and adapted for future generations. In this Home Project workshop, Dusty from Dreamtime Games shows us Gorri – a ...

  5. 21 de feb. de 2019 · Gorri, Wungoolay. A game in which Aboriginal boys and men throw or roll a small object (a tennis ball or a disc) along a line at a moving target. Players are required to try and strike the moving object with spears from a distance of about 15m to score points for their team.

  6. 13 de mar. de 2024 · Gorri, la visitante más simpática de Armintza desde hace 15 días. La foca, Gorri, lleva más de dos semanas en el puerto de Armintza. El reportero Jon Ballesteros pregunta sobre este acontecimiento a los vecinos curiosos que se acercan al puerto a visitarla.

  7. 26 de feb. de 2011 · artist QS:P170,Q1556647. Description. English: All over Aboriginal Australia, men, youths and sometimes boys play games where they try to spear moving targets. Often the targets are round discs of bark. In the Humbert River area two sides take it in turns to spear the disc rolled in front of them.