McConnel's initial reports state that the clans were
patrilineal.
Claude Lévi-Strauss reports that though marriage among the Wik-Mungkan was
matrilateral, marrying one's father's sister's daughter, and one's mother's brother's daughter, was allowed. A strict ban prohibited only bi-lateral cousin marriage.
Exogamy meant kinship networks ran through the clans, meaning that in times of local abundance in any variety of food stock, relatives outside a given clan area would be called in to partake of the bounty, creating on such occasions large encampments.) The elderly were well-cared for, having a right to certain foods forbidden to the more active people, who would supply them with choice snake and stingray food that was taboo to the younger members. The centre of family life was the hearth, reflected in the words for father (
pan tuma: man of the fire) and mother (
wantya tuma: woman of the fire). McConnel described the Wik-Mingkan kinship and marriage system in 1934, arguing that, in its essentials, with minor variants, it could be extended to apply to all the Wik peoples. Affirming that in its general lines it reflected the general structure typical of Australian Aboriginal peoples, differing only
in lacking a 4 or 8 section system, she discerned 5 features:(1) localised
exogamous (
patrilineal) clans; (2) with each people divided into two exogamous moieties; (3) with
sororate and
levirate marriage; (4) modified cross-cousin marriage; (5) with a comprehensive classificatory terminology.
Runaway marriage (
maritji) was accepted as orthodox if the kinship link considered the couple's relationship licit. When mimicked by theatrical performances of the practice at large corroborees,
maritji often elicits much laughter.
Bride kidnapping, though traditionally practised when no spouse could be obtained by the usual means, was, according to a white informant, undertaken by formal prearrangements made between the raiding people and the group from whom the woman was to be "snatched", so the actual raid was a symbolic artifice rather than an act of violent intertribal competition for a scarce resource. The Wik-Mungkan call coastal neighbours north of the Archer and Watson rivers "bad speech" (
Wik-waiya) peoples (such as the
Anjingit, the
Aritingiti, the
Adetingiti and
Lengiti) because they find their languages difficult to understand.
Totem system by territory The word for totem was
pulwaiya, roughly "old forebear", whose place of origin thereby became an
auwa or totemic ritual site, and the place where one returns to on death. The Wik-Mungkan are thought to have been composed of approximately 30 patrilineal clans, each with distinct territorial rights, before the white man's arrival. A clan could have more than one totem, and they were complementary to each other, not reduplicated. One's clan totem influenced one's birth name. Thus a member of the "meteor" totem could receive the name
Aka(ground)-
battana (hits), and the kangaroo totem could endow a child with the name
pampointjalama (kangaroo sniffs the air and smells a man). The prefix
mai refers to vegetable food (
maiyi), while that of
min refers to meat (
minya). Where confusion exists as to the precise state of a clan, those which are numbered (a) (b) etc., indicate presumed sections of one clan, though the totemic groups thus listed may have been independent.
Archer River • I (a)
pikua (
salt water crocodile);(b)
min wunkam ("night-fish");
mai anka (white fruit). • 2 (a)
mai korpi (
black mangrove); (b)
min wolkollan (
bone-fish); (c)
neanya (fly); (d)
min tatta (frog);
moiya (
bullroarer). • 3 (a)
kongkong (white
fish-hawk); (b)
min parkanjan (small hawk); (c)
min tempi (swamp duck); (d)
min mantaba (
plains turkey); (e)
min wunkam (
Rock cod); (f)
min tuttha (parrot); (g)
mai ariki (
blue water-lily); (h)
wanka (
string dilly bag); (i)
puntamen (fishing net). • 4 (a)
mai umpia (water-lily root); (b)
mai wuma (water lily seed) • 5 (a)
mai maitji (bush-nut); (b)
min jintan (a type of fish); (c)
min ekka (freshwater mussel); (d)
mai neanya (a black fruit) (e)
mai neitja (red and white fruit). • 6
mai kanpuka white water lily. • 7 (a)
min kanmula (
male cuscus; (b)
min pokauwan (female cuscus); (c)
min woripa (storm bird), (d) ''mai po'am
(white fruit); (e)min monti'' (
jabiru). • 8.1
min wonna (tree grub). • 8.2 (a)
min mulaiya (white water-snake); (b)
mai tallina (edible palm-tree fruit; (c)
mai yukata (black fruit). • 9.1 (a)
olarika (male leech); (b)
uwa (female leech); (c) ''ku'a
(male dingo); (d)ku'a'' (female dingo) (e) (edible palm tem); (f) n(small root). • 9.2
min kuimpi (kangaroo). • 10 (a)
ornya (male ghosts); (b)
pantia (female ghosts/'sweethearts'); (c)
min nguttham(small bird); (d)
min kiwa (small fish). • 11.1 (a)
min kora (native companion); (b) ''mai po'alam'' (yellow fruit) • 11.2
oingorpan (
carpet snake)
Kendall River • 12.1
min kuipang (
bream) • 12.2
min akala (cat-fish) • 13.1
min atjimba (emu) • 13.2 (a)
min ketji (white crane); 8b)
mai mayta (small root); (c)
mai arika (water-lily); (d)
yoinka manka (
ironwood flower). • 13.3
min wainkan (
curlew) • 13.4
min kerki (
chicken hawk) • 14.1 (a)
min kulan(
male opossum);
min wutjiga (female opossum) • 14.2
min pola (
black snake). • 15
mai kampa and
pontamanka (bloodwood and messmate flowers) • 16
min nompi (
eaglehawk) • 17 (a)
patja (shooting star/meteor); (b)
min tjipin (
quail). • 18 (a)
min wata (
crow); (b) (
praying mantis); (large iguana).
Holroyd River • 19
mai manyi (small sweet water lily). • 20
mai kuntjan (
pandanus). • 21 (a)
mia yungatang (
native cat); (b)
min wala (
blue-tongued lizard). • 22.1
min panta (small iguana). • 22.2
min yuwam (snake) • 22.3
min umpara (
freshwater stingray?). • 22.4
min anka (sardine fish) • 23
min manki (
bandicoot).
Edward River • 24
min kena (
freshwater crocodile). • 25
mai atta (honey). ==Ethnographic studies==