Long before writing, before cities, before agriculture, Aboriginal Australians were already living inside one of the most sophisticated cosmological systems the world has ever produced. The Dreaming — known in Arrernte as alcherrenge, sometimes translated as “eternal, uncreated” — is not a myth in the way the word is often used. It is a living reality, a moral code, a map of the land, and a framework for understanding time itself.
Key facts
- Aboriginal Australian Dreaming: The tradition is coextensive with Aboriginal Australian presence on the continent, now estimated by geneticists and archaeologists at roughly 50,000–65,000 C.E. — making it among the oldest continuous cultural traditions on Earth.
- Dreaming stories: These are not uniform across the continent — they vary significantly between nations, languages, and regions, with hundreds of distinct traditions covering creation, law, kinship, land, animals, and the cosmos.
- Dreamtime concept: The English term “Dreamtime” was coined by anthropologist Francis Gillen in 1896 C.E. and later popularized by A. P. Elkin — but many Aboriginal people find it inadequate or misleading, since it implies something imagined rather than a lived daily reality.
A worldview that redefines time
In most Western frameworks, time moves in a line: past, present, future. The Dreaming works differently.
Anthropologist William Stanner described the Aboriginal conception of time as “Everywhen” — a state in which the ancestral past, the living present, and the unfolding future are not separate but simultaneous. The ancestral beings who shaped the land did not simply act and disappear. They are the land. The carpet-snake people of the Anangu tradition live on in the rock formations of Uluru. The crocodile-man Ginga of the Gaagudju people is the sandstone escarpment of Kakadu.
This is not metaphor. Or rather, it is not merely metaphor. For the peoples who hold these traditions, the land is an archive of everything that has ever happened — and of everything that still continues to happen.
A continent of distinct voices
One of the most important things to understand about the Dreaming is that it is not one thing. Australia was home to hundreds of distinct nations at the time of European contact, and Dreaming traditions vary accordingly.
In the Gamilaraay and Wiradjuri traditions of New South Wales, the sun came into being through a cosmic accident: the Brolga, in a quarrel with the Emu, hurled an enormous egg into the sky, where it struck a pile of kindling and burst into the first sunrise. The sky spirits, moved by the beauty of the light, resolved to rekindle it every morning — and appointed the Kookaburra to wake the world with its laughter at dawn.
In the Noongar traditions of Western Australia, the sun is Ngaangk — a maternal spirit who crosses the sky each day carrying a smoldering Banksia cone, mirroring the practice of Aboriginal women carrying fire between campsites. Each evening she descends through a subterranean tunnel to begin again. The sun is not a fixed object. It is a daily act of care.
These are two stories from one theme across one continent. The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies maintains records of hundreds more — a vast, living library of knowledge encoded in story, ceremony, and landscape.
Knowledge, ceremony, and the life force of places
Dreaming traditions do more than explain origins. They govern relationships — between people, between communities, between humans and the land.
A person may “own” a specific Dreaming: a Kangaroo Dreaming, a Honey Ant Dreaming, a Shark Dreaming. These are not hobbies or totems in the decorative sense. They carry responsibility. Ceremonies performed at sacred sites are understood as re-creations of the original Dreaming events — acts that keep the life force of those places active. According to the tradition, if the ceremonies are not performed, the creative energy of the site cannot continue to generate new life.
This is ecological knowledge expressed as cosmology. The Warlpiri concept of Jukurrpa — one of the many words translated loosely as “Dreaming” — encompasses law, cultural knowledge, and the relationships between people, animals, plants, and the physical features of the land. It describes not just how things came to be, but what those relationships mean and how they must be maintained.
Lasting impact
The Dreaming represents one of humanity’s most enduring intellectual and spiritual achievements — a system that held together hundreds of communities across an entire continent for tens of thousands of years, with no writing, no central authority, and no coercive enforcement mechanism.
It encoded environmental knowledge — seasonal patterns, ecological relationships, the behavior of animals and plants — into forms that could be memorized, sung, danced, and passed across generations. Research published in journals including Nature Human Behaviour has documented how Dreaming stories appear to contain accurate oral records of geological events — including sea-level changes from more than 7,000 years ago — preserved with remarkable fidelity across hundreds of generations.
The tradition also underpins contemporary Aboriginal land rights claims. When the Anangu people of Central Australia describe Uluru as the physical body of ancestral Dreaming beings, they are not speaking poetically about tourism. They are asserting a sovereignty grounded in the deepest possible relationship to place — one that predates any nation-state by orders of magnitude.
Today, Indigenous Australian communities continue to practice, transmit, and protect Dreaming traditions. The recent recognition of Indigenous land rights at international forums, including COP30 acknowledgments of 160 million hectares of Indigenous-managed land, reflects growing global recognition of what Aboriginal Australians have always known: that people and land cannot be separated.
Blindspots and limits
The term “Dreaming” itself was invented by outsiders — colonial-era anthropologists who may have mistranslated the Arrernte word alcherrenge and whose framework inevitably distorted what they were trying to describe. Grouping all Aboriginal Australian traditions under one label flattens an enormous diversity of nations, languages, and beliefs into a single Western-legible concept. Some Aboriginal people find the word actively misleading, since “dreaming” in English implies unreality — the opposite of what the tradition means to those who hold it.
Much of what was recorded in the 19th and early 20th centuries C.E. was filtered through the assumptions of its recorders, and a significant portion of Dreaming knowledge has been lost due to the catastrophic disruption of colonization.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — The Dreaming
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognized at COP30: 160 million hectares
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
- 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
- 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
- ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.
More Good News
-

UK cancer death rates reach their lowest level ever recorded
Cancer death rates in the United Kingdom have fallen to the lowest level ever recorded, according to Cancer Research UK data published in 2026. Age-standardized mortality rates have dropped by more than 25% over the past two decades, driven by advances in lung, bowel, and breast cancer treatment and diagnosis. Expanded NHS screening programs, immunotherapy, and targeted drug therapies are credited as key factors behind the sustained decline. The achievement represents generations of compounding progress across research, clinical care, and public health, though significant inequalities in cancer survival persist across socioeconomic and geographic lines.
-

California condors nest on Yurok land in the Pacific Northwest for the first time in over a century
California condors are nesting in the Pacific Northwest for the first time in over a century, on Yurok Tribe territory in Northern California. The confirmed nest marks a landmark moment in condor recovery and represents deep cultural restoration for the Yurok people, who consider the condor — prey-go-neesh — a sacred relative. The Yurok Tribe has led reintroduction efforts since 2008, combining Indigenous ecological knowledge with conventional conservation science. Successful wild nesting signals the recovering population is crossing a critical threshold, demonstrating that Indigenous-led conservation produces measurable, meaningful results.
-

Canada commits .8 billion to protect 30% of its lands and waters by 2030
Canada 30×30 conservation commitment: Canada has pledged .8 billion to protect 30% of its lands and waters by 2030, one of the largest conservation investments in the country’s history. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the plan under the global Kunming-Montréal biodiversity framework, with Indigenous-led conservation and Guardians programs at its center. The commitment matters globally because Canada’s boreal forests, Arctic tundra, and freshwater systems regulate climate far beyond its borders. Whether the pledge delivers lasting protection will depend on the strength of legal frameworks and the quality of Indigenous partnership.

