Wakaya
Norman Tindale's Aboriginal Tribes of Australia places the Wakaya (alternatively, Wagaja, Waggaia, Wagai, Waagai, Wagaiau, Waagi, Warkya, Wogaia, Worgaia, Worgai, Workaia, Warkaia, Workia, Workii, Woorkia, Lee-wakya, Akaja (Kaytetye exonym), Ukkia, Arkiya) on 39,000 square kilometres of country straddling the Queensland-Northern Territory border, extending east beyond Camooweal to Yelvertoft and Flora Downs and along the Buckley and Georgina Rivers north of Lake Nash.
The AIATSIS Map of Indigenous Australia shows the Waanyi as their notrthern neighbours with the Wakabunga to the easr and the Bularnu to their south.
They spoke a Pama Nyungan language related to the neighbouring Bularn and Warluwarra that is now considered extinct.
