, Paris Like the Aboriginal peoples generally of the Western Arnhem, land, the Bininj believed in the primordial creative function of a
Rainbow serpent, which is generally called
Ngalyod which has lineaments more suggestive of the feminine than masculine. It came to Australia from the sea northeast of the
Cobourg Peninsula When
Baldwin Spencer visited the area and was a guest at Cahill's homestead at Oenpelli, he picked up one version which spoke of the same figure as being called
Numereji Legend has it coming from the north, full of spirit-children, and settling at a point called Coopers Creek on the East Alligator River, she transformed her children into men, creating waterholes to cater to their thirst, supplying men with spears and
woomera, and women with
dilly bags and
digging sticks, while endowing both with intelligence and their senses. She swallows those who infringe her laws, and drowns children who cry, since she is disturbed by noise. In Dreaming narratives, when
Ngalyod surges from the earth to devour some ancestral species, it does so because a taboo has been violated, and the act sanctifies the site. • For the Kuninjku important dreaming sites (
djang) are the Leech Dreaming at
Yibalaydjyigod in the swamps of the Manggabor Creek, the Maggot Dreaming at Yirolk, where a rock, girdled by water lilies, rises out of a waterhole and the Barramundi Dreaming around Marrkolidjban. The former two are likened to the Rainbow serpent, connoting, by battening on flesh, themes of decay and rebirth The souls (
kunmalng) of the Kuninjku are themselves derived from the water spirits at such sites. The rejuvenating
monsoonal downpours are caused by the flight of
Ngalyod from its underground sanctuary into the sky, marked by the rainbow. Increase ceremonies like the
Kunabibi and yabbadurruwa rites are performed in order to incite the
djang to stir the onset of the fertilizing rains. ==Notable people==