This is the full-content study version of "Spatial Patterns of the World's Indigenous Peoples" — one of the spatial patterns related to culture in the People, Patterns and Processes focus area. Read it, then use the activity sheet and the topic study guide to revise. Treat Indigenous peoples' knowledge and histories with respect and accuracy.
Syllabus: spatial patterns related to culture — Indigenous Peoples.
The descendants of the original inhabitants of a region, who maintain distinct cultures, languages, and connections to land that pre-date colonisation and modern national borders.
Indigenous peoples live on every inhabited continent, but their distribution is uneven and clusters in particular regions. Major concentrations include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia, peoples of the Amazon Basin, circumpolar peoples of the Arctic (Inuit, Sámi), many peoples across sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Pacific.
Why these patterns matter — continuity and connection to place.
Indigenous cultures are among the longest-continuing on Earth. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures have been continuous for 65,000+ years, sustained through oral tradition, kinship systems, law and custodianship of land.
For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, Country is far more than land — it is an interconnected, living whole of land, waters, sky, plants, animals, people, stories, law and identity, to which people belong and have responsibilities.
This challenges a purely economic reading of "human activity": people's relationships with place are cultural and spiritual, not only material. That is why the syllabus treats spatial patterns related to culture alongside settlement and economic patterns.
The process that reshaped Indigenous spatial patterns.
Colonisation dispossessed Indigenous peoples of land, disrupted languages and cultural practice, and produced lasting social, economic and health inequalities. It is the single biggest influence on where Indigenous peoples live today and the challenges they face.
Describe impacts accurately but avoid a "deficit" story. Indigenous peoples have survived and adapted — cultural continuity, resistance and revival are central to the picture, not just loss.
The Australian pattern — hundreds of nations and connection to land.
Before 1788 the continent was home to hundreds of distinct nations and language groups (around 250 languages), each with its own Country, law and custodial responsibilities — a rich cultural map, not an empty land.
Native title law now recognises ongoing connection to Country where it can be established (following Mabo v Queensland (No 2) 1992 and the Native Title Act 1993). Aboriginal land and fire-management practices ("caring for Country") are increasingly recognised for biodiversity and bushfire mitigation.
When you "describe a spatial pattern", name the where (distribution and density), the scale (local → global), and the process that produced it (here: deep occupation + colonisation).
A second national pattern for comparison.
Canada's Indigenous population is about 1.8 million (2021 census, ≈5% of Canadians), made up of three recognised groups: First Nations, Métis and Inuit. The Inuit are concentrated across the northern Arctic; First Nations and Métis are distributed nationwide, including on reserves and in cities.
Contemporary issues include land and treaty rights, disputes over resource and pipeline development on traditional lands, and reconciliation following the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Why these patterns matter for sustainability.
Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) — accumulated understanding of land, water, fire, seasons and species — is increasingly valued in conservation, land management and climate adaptation. Indigenous-managed lands often sustain high biodiversity.
In 2017 the Māori relationship with the Whanganui River was recognised in law by granting the river legal personhood (the Te Awa Tupua Act 2017) — a world-first that reflects an Indigenous view of nature as a living ancestor with rights, not just a resource.
Where the pattern is heading.
International recognition grew with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007). Ongoing priorities include self-determination, land rights, language revitalisation, and closing gaps in health, education and wellbeing. In Australia this includes reconciliation and recognition debates.
Prefer Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authored or endorsed sources, and consult your local AECG / community for classroom & assessment use (free, prior & informed consent + attribution — the ICIP standard).
Everything in this chapter traces to a source you can check. Watch the explainer, read the primary sources, follow the news, and practise the geographical skills this chapter uses.
You should be able to: describe the global spatial distribution of Indigenous peoples and explain why it is uneven; use the concept of Country; explain colonisation's impact on Indigenous spatial patterns; compare the Australian and Canadian cases; and evaluate the value of Indigenous knowledge for sustainability. Test yourself with the activity sheet and the topic study guide.