around Brisbane The precise borders of traditional Gooreng Gooreng lands have been disputed.
Walter Roth, while collecting data on their language in the later 19th century, placed them in Camboon Rawbelle where their main camp was at that time, Jiggings.
Norman Tindale distinguished them from a
Goeng Meerooni coastal people (1770/Agnes) and defined their land as extending over and embracing the eastern bank of the upper
Burnett River from
Mundubbera north to the Callide Ranges and east to Mt Perry Ranges and
Many Peaks. It is possible that a confusion arose, taking two distinct dialect forms of the one cultural complex, to denote distinct and separate realities, with the Gureng Gureng taken to be an inland tribe, and the Goeng (Meerooni) denoting their affines on the coast. A recent survey of the available evidence concludes that the Goreng Goring's lands encompassed the "whole of Boyne Valley to Auburn NoGo Callide Cania Ranges". No coastal reef dialect language exists as Gooreng Gooreng are inland freshwater people. Their totem is the emu. ==Society and culture==