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    <name><![CDATA[WA Journey Ways - Jindalee Songline]]></name>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>A songline is a story associated with a journey made by a Spiritual ancestor. During this journey landscape and landmarks were formed, relationships were observed and established, mistakes made, lessons learnt, skills developed and the values of the community established. Songlines are still walked and sung and as such are living narratives. Jindalee (she has different names in other places) is s Spirit Woman from the Koondarn (dreamtime). She is present as the world emerges from The Nyitiny (cold, dark time). The trees had taken root on the earth and the spirit ancestors of animals were finding homes in the new landscape. When Jindalee first made her journey the coastline was approximately 200m west of the current coastline so some of her footprints&nbsp; are now underwater. Where she walked her footprints created hollows that collected water and became oasis for flora and fauna and later for people.&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline ]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[It was still uncertain who would become the carers of everything. Jindalee was looking out from Kaarta Garup (head camp) on Mount Eliza, Kings Park, and saw beautiful little lights. She was curious and discovered the lights were in the eyes of Spirit Children. Jindalee was entranced and followed the Spirit Children onto the land. Jindalee turned south, collecting the children and putting them in her hair. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2177'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Her journey begins when she put her feet on the land near Coombarnup (Bunbury).  This was and remains a major meeting place for the three Nyoongar nations the Waardandi, the Kaneang and Pindjarup people whose land connects just east of Coombarnup.  
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2178'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint. Sea levels have risen since this footprint was made and it is now joined to the sea
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2179'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.6775,-32.908333</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee Footprint. Her tasks, as she walked this way, was to ensure the rivers were clean and there was food for the birds. Her footprints were, and remain, places where rivers flowed. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217a'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.653611,-32.745</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee footprint.  Noorook Yalgorap (Lake Clifton) means the lake with eggs. It is, like all Yalgurap, a yorka (womens) place as is the area known as Wokalup, place of the Rainbow Serpent. Noorook Yalgorap links Jindalee in both her Spirit Woman and Rainbow Serpent forms. The noorook (eggs) are a reference to the eggs laid by the Rainbow Serpent. They are the thrombolites, which, like stromatolites are produced by excretions of an algea called cynobateria. Jindalee wept rainbow tears and gave the world colour, cynobacteria also gave the world colour. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217b'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprints, now partly inundated with seawater, known as Peel-Harvey Estuary. A place such great bounty it was a major meeting place. Mandjar (Mandurah) with its bays full of fish and shellfish and proximity to the seasonal benefits of Djilda and the surrounding swamps made an excellent place for large gatherings at almost any time of the year. Mandja became a marketplace where people from many places gathered to trade ochres, tools made from particular stone and plants and their extracts that were not locally available such as pidjeri, from which an oral nicotine lozenge was made. Any large gathering place inevitably leads to the blossoming of new relationships. Unlike Mandjmup, which was a place of arranging and conducting marriages, Mandjoogoorap (meeting place of the heart) was perhaps a place where those from different tribal groups could find a partner, provided their totems were appropriate. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217c'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.798889,-32.5375</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprints.  At Barrgup, there is a traditional mungah (fish weir). 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217d'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.771389,-32.339722</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Walyungarup (place where Nyoongars talk) was probably a meeting place, the area could sustain a number of people at certain times of the year 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217e'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, between here and Jennalup (Blackwall Reach) her footprints have been covered by sea. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc217f'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.824167,-32.165</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, also known as toodjabubup toodja meaning a plentiful as in Toodjay (place of plenty) 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2180'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.825833,-32.144167</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, now known as Thomson's Lake 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2181'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.834444,-32.123056</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint. Yangebup named, like Yanchep, after the native flax yanget. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2182'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.786111,-32.094722</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, now known as Bibra Lake. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2183'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprints come back on land at Jennalup meaning place of the foot (Blackwall Reach). Her footprint created the deepest part of the river. It was the place where one of the Spirit Children grasped onto her hair with long fingernails, snapping off her hair and it fell to the earth, this has become closely associated with Lake Joondalup. Jennalup was traditionally a place for woman. When boys were undergoing a ritual test for manhood, they needed to jump off the Reach, catch a fish and present it to their women folk waiting by the spit at what is now Point Walter.   
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2184'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.846111,-31.91</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee footprint now known as Dog Swamp 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2185'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.822778,-31.926667</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, now known as Lake Monger. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2186'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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        <coordinates>115.813611,-31.923611</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint, now known as Herdsman Lake. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2187'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
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      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.789167,-31.878333</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2188'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.786944,-31.923333</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint now known as Karrinyup Waters. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2189'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.811389,-31.075833</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218a'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.795833,-31.744444</coordinates>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint’s created a series of lakes here. Although Jennalup (Blackwall Reach) was the place where Jindalee’s hair fell it has become closely associated with Lake Joondalup. This is because at certain times of the year the lake gives a wonderful reflection of the Joondal – the Milky Way. Hence the name jondal (hair).  
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218b'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.749444,-31.678611</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218c'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.729722,-31.633889</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Jindalee's footprint. Lake Nowergup means a place of sweet water.&nbsp;</p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218d'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.7225,-31.6175</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint, now a small lake. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218e'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.683889,-31.583889</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint, now a swamp. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc218f'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.694722,-31.573611</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2190'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.686389,-31.556389</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee’s footprint. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2191'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.6925,-31.5475</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee passed here on her way north, leaving a crystal cave. Named after the native flax yanget. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2192'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.6725,-31.532222</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint. Yanget grows extensively here. The root is about a finger in diameter and a foot length long and is used to make bread after being peeled, roasted and pounded to make flour. Burning of the leaves prior to the April-May harvest improved the flavour of the bulb. The yanget season was a time for people to gather and celebrate. The rushes were extremely useful as they were made into a string, which had all manner of purposes including the construction of nets. Nets were used for fishing and for catching waterfowl. Strategically hung between trees a Nyoongar would use his boomerang to cause the birds on the water to rise in panic and be caught in the net. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2193'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.665,-31.455833</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's left springs in her wake.  
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2194'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.521389,-31.4275</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee songline carries on north under the ocean.  
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2195'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>114.614722,-28.865278</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee songline carries on north under the ocean.
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2196'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>114.578056,-23.799167</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Her footprints and the children who fell from her hair as rocks created what is now called the African Reef system.  
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2197'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115,-28.399167</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee resting place now known as Chapman Valley.   
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2198'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>114.647222,-28.693611</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee turned east to Nabawa. She needed to rest, she sat down creating a valley surrounded by flat topped hills. As she rested a family formed called numarakara. They are represented by a big rock for Dad, a smaller rock for Mum and little rocks for the kid
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc2199'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>115.442222,-29.193056</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee's footprint. She suddenly realised that picking up the children was wrong for they were the future generations of carers of everything. She began to wander around in a panic. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc219a'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>116.717222,-31.441389</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jennacubine (footprint of spirit woman). 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc219b'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
    </Placemark>
    <Placemark>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>117.0075,-31.628333</coordinates>
      </Point>
      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
      <styleUrl>#TLCMapStyle</styleUrl>
      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee grew afraid and trembled, the trembling moved down into the land. She cried out; “what have I done? What have I done?” The place where Jindalee trembled is now known as the Southwest Seismic Zone, a region of concentrated intra-plate seismicity, which produces swarms of trembles. This zone delivered the famous Meckering earthquake, registering 6.9 on the Richter Scale in 1968. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc219c'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[Jindalee tried to put the children back on the land but they turned to stone. She let go of her hair and Spirit Children tumbled to the ground turning to stone, the stones became higher and higher. She began to run, weeping, moving into land that she had not been in before, the Spirit Children still in her hair were screaming in fear…More children were falling and turning to stone, the piles of stones grew higher and higher. Where Jindalee roamed over the land in great distress, there are now chains of salt lakes. These are vestiges of ancient river systems. When seen on satellite image these little salt lakes look like strings of tears. The area is now known as Wyalkatchem but when it was first recoded in 1876 it was as Wal kwetjang, an approximation of what the local Nyoongars called it, which translates as land of ancient tears. 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc219d'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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      <name><![CDATA[Jindalee Songline]]></name>
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      <description><![CDATA[More children were falling and turning to stone, the piles of stones grew higher and higher. Jindalee put her foot on the pile of stones, and they tumbled and rolled like a wave down through the southwest. The stone beneath her foot suddenly sprang up like a trampoline flinging the Spirit Woman up into the sky. This was called Kartagitj (head first like a spear). It is now known as Wave Rock. The songline continues in the sky, her hair spread out to form the Milky Way and the remaining children are stars in the Milky Way. Continue reading the story in Noel Karda Nannup’s book Moondang-ak Koorliny kaaradiny (Batchelor Press, NT. 2006) 
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/search?id=tc219e'>TLCMap</a></p>
			<p><a href='https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/644'>TLCMap Layer</a></p>]]></description>
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