Manning 2021, pp. 21.08. Manning, Jane (series producer) (10 August 2021). Back to Nature - The Green Cauldron (Television production). Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
"The name Yugambeh (or Yugam) follows another common convention of language names in the area, by naming the language by its word for 'no'.. Yugambeh (or its older form Yugumbir) is just the word for 'no' (or more accurately 'no' plus the suffix -beh or -bir)." (Sharpe 1998, p. 2) Sharpe, Margaret C. (1998). Dictionary of Yugambeh including neighbouring dialects(PDF). Pacific Linguistics. ISBN0-85883-480-4.
The word, referring to the indigenous people, means "Eaglehawk" (Prior et al. 1887, p. 213). Prior, T.de M. M.; Landsborough, W.; White, W.G.; O'Connor, J. (1887). "Between Albert and Tweed Rivers"(PDF). In Curr, Edward Micklethwaite (ed.). The Australian race: its origin, languages, customs, place of landing in Australia and the routes by which it spread itself over the continent. Vol. 3. Melbourne: J. Ferres. pp. 231–239 – via Internet Archive.
According to Germaine Greer, Archibald Meston called people in this area Talgiburri, equivalent to what Margaret Sharpe transcribes as the Dalgaybara, a word meaning "people of the dalgay or dry sclerophyll forest" rather than saltwater people. Greer argues that there is an apparent confusion, asserting that "The Kombumerri called themselves people of the dry forest; Bullum called them mangrove-worm (cobra) eaters, and now they describe themselves as 'saltwater people'." (Greer 2014, pp. 118–119) Greer, Germaine (2014). White Beech: The Rainforest Years. A&C Black. ISBN978-1-408-84671-1.
Alexandra & Stanley 2007, p. 36. Alexandra, Jason; Stanley, Jane (August 2007). Aboriginal Communities and Mixed Agricultural Businesses - Opportunities and future needs (Thesis). Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Australian Government. CiteSeerX10.1.1.455.5778.
The Wangerriburra tribe occupied the country in the basin of the middle Albert River and the headwaters of the Coomera River. Their territory stretched from Cedar Creek on the north to the Macpherson Range on the south; and from the Birnam Range on the west to the Upper Coomera and the Nerang Watershed on the east. It contained the well-known Tamborine Mountain. Its greatest length from north to south was 33 miles, its greatest breadth, 15 miles (Cunningham 1969, p. 97) Cunningham, M. (1969). A Description of the Yugumbir Dialect of Bandjalang(PDF). Vol. 1. University of Queensland Papers. pp. 69–122.
Watson n.d. Watson, F. J. Vocabularies of four representative tribes of South Eastern Queensland: with grammatical notes thereof and some notes on manners andcustos: Also, a list of aboriginal place names and their derivations. Brisbane, Queensland: Royal Geographical Society of Australia. OCLC682056722.
Jefferies 2011. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 138. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Evans 1999, p. 131. Evans, Raymond (1999). Fighting words: writing about race. Queensland, Australia: University of Queensland Press. p. 131. ISBN070223109-6. OCLC42469115.
Jefferies 2011, p. 120. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. v. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 31. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 80.5. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 77.5. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 77. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 108–111. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 108–109. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 132. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 110. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 145–146. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 147–148. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 152. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 87–91. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, pp. 157–158. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 156. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 33. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.
Jefferies 2011, p. 133. Jefferies, Tony (2011). Guwar, the language of Moreton Island, and its relationship to the Bandjalang and Yagara subgroups: a case for phylogenetic migratory expansion? (MPhil thesis). University of Queensland. OCLC953518901.