Djankun
Although they do not appear on the AIATSIS Map of Indigenous Australia , Norman Tindale's Aboriginal Tribes of Australia places the Djankun people (alternatively, Ngaikungu, Dyangun, Chungki, Dyangunbari, Djandnandi, Chunkunburra, Chunkunberry, Changunberries, Shanganburra, Kokotjangun (Kuku-Yalanji term), Kokomutju (name used by tribes to the north), Mutju, Ngaikungo, Ngaikungo-i (based on place name with suffix) on 3,400 square kilometres of country around Mount Mulligan and Thornborough, extending as far south as Almaden, east to Dimbulah near the head of the Walsh River and west to Mungana.
They appear in the AIATSIS databases as Kuku Djangun/Djungan (Y109), identified as a dialect of Kuku Yalanji Y78 with the suggestion that "documentation on Kuku Yalanji may be relevant".
The Endangered Languages Project, which opts for Djangun, describes their Yalandyic/Pama-Nyungan language as dormant and offers Adho-Adhom, Butju, Chunkumberries, Djandnandi, Djungan, Gugu Djangun, Gugu Dyangun, Jangun Djanggun, Koko-Mudj, Kokotjangun, Koko-Tyankun, Kuu Jangkun, Mutyu, Ngaigungo and Ngaikungu as additional alternatives.
,
