According to ethnologistNorman Tindale, the traditional lands of the Kureinji embraced some 1,700 square miles (4,400 km2) of territory, running in good part along the northern banks of the Murray River, ranging from the vicinity of Euston to Wentworth downstream.[4]
Across the river from the Kureinji, Mildura, which is in Latjilatji tribal land, was first settled by Europeans in 1847.
Kemendok National Park is part of their traditional land, and traces of their habitation remains in scar trees, fire hearths, flaked stone artefacts, burial sites and middens.[5]
History
Charles Sturt[6] passed through their country in 1830 but did not mention the Kureinji. Charles Lockhart in 1862 also appears to mention them, but without specifying them by name.[4] Today, many Kureinji live in Mildura.
During colonial times, the remains of many Aboriginal people were looted from five burial sites along the New South Wales side of the Murray River,[7] and became part of the Murray Black Collection. Aboriginal groups have sought the repatriation of the bodies.[a]
^"The Murray Black Collection was the largest collection of Indigenous Australian remains at the time of its donation, comprising approximately 800 individuals from the Maraura, Kureinji, Tati-tati, and Wati Wati peoples across five burial sites along the New South Wales side of the Murray River." (Prince 2015, pp. 11–13, 11)