Ngadju traditional land took in some 20,600 square miles (53,000 km2), running south from Goddard Creek to Mount Ragged, Israelite Bay and Point Malcolm.
[1] In 2014 and 2017 the Federal Court recognized Ngadju traditional ownership of over 102,000 square kilometres, after a long legal proceeding which began in 1995.
The land includes exclusive native title over approximately 45,000 square kilometres, east and west of the town of Norseman.
[2] The Ngadju serve as traditional custodians of the area, which covers 43,993.01 km2, about a quarter of the Great Western Woodlands.
[2] Richard Helms, in his account of the Elders Expedition, writes of a case of polydactyly he came across among a people of this region:- A remarkable lusus naturae was observed among the women of the Frazer Range, one of whom had six perfect fingers on each hand and the same number of toes on each foot.