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Yawkyawk is a word from the Aboriginal Kunwinjku/Kunwok language, meaning 'young woman' and 'young woman spirit being'.
Sometimes compared to the European notion of mermaids, yawkyawks are usually depicted with the tails of fish.
They have long hair, associated with trailing blooms of algae, typically found in Arnhem Land streams and rock pools.
National Museum curator Kipley Nink said the yawkyawks were a relatively new way of representing ancestral beings which had existed in stories for many years.
The figures add a new dimension to the National Museum's collection, showing new directions in dynamic fibre craft practices.
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