Jabiluka is a pair of uranium deposits and mine development in the Northern Territory of Australia that was to have been built on land belonging to the Mirarr clan of Aboriginal people.
[5] In 2024, the Northern Territory Government decided not to renew ERA's lease for the high-grade uranium deposit.
The Mirarr people agitated for Rio Tinto to clean up the mine site and restore it in keeping with the surrounding National Park.
In 2006, documentary filmmaker Pip Starr released Fight for Country: the story of the Jabiluka Blockade.
[11] In 1979 Bonita Ely, assisted by Charles Green and William Winford, performed "Jabiluka UO2", using the binaries spiral and straight line to express conflicting, opposing, cultures.
Ely creates a fringed conical dome adorned with an ochre spiral, referring to the woven mats women in Arnhem Land make for their babies and to rest in.