Yirandali
According to Norman Tindale, the Yirandali (a.k.a. Yirandhali, Jirandali, Irendely, Pooroga, Daleburra, Dalleburra, Mungobarra, Gutonbarra) were the traditional custodians of around 41,000 square kilometres of country in the present day Flinders Shire west of the Great Dividing Range, around the upper Dutton and Flinders Rivers. Their country stretched from near Mount Sturgeon southwards as far as Caledonia and west towards Richmond, Corfield, and the area east of Winton. Their territory included Torrens, Tower Hill, and Landsborough Creeks, Lammermoor, Hughenden and Tangorin.
Their language, which is now extinct, may possibly have belonged to the Maric branch of the Pama–Nyungan language family. According to Peter Sutton, the vocabulary given by M. Armstrong (the language of the Upper Cape River, in E. M. Curr's The Australian Race, Volume II), which Tindale ascribes to the Yilba, actually belongs to the Yirandhali language.
