Aboriginal culture is still strong in Northern Queensland and a Dance and Cultural Festival, held every two years 15 kilometres from the outback town of Laura, 300 kilometres north of Cairns in the south of Cape York Peninsula, is a wonderful celebration of this. This is a selection of participating groups, coming from the following places:
- Palm Island, also known by the Aboriginal name Bwcolman (Bukaman), is a tropical island with a resident community of about 2,000 people, 65 kilometres north-west of Townsville, on the east coast of Queensland.
- Mornington Island is the largest of the 22 Wellesley Islands in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria. The majority of the islanders are Aboriginal: Lardil are the traditional owners of the land and surrounding seas. The Kaiadilt clan arrived more recently (1947) from nearby Bentinck Island.
- The Kawanji Aboriginal dance group is from Cairns, the main town in Far North Queensland.
- Djarragun College is a school for indigenous students, coming from Aboriginal communities in Cape York and the Torres Strait Islands.
- The Mayi Wunba dance group comes from Mona Mona community near the picturesque mountain retreat of Kuranda Village, just 25 kilometres northwest of Cairns and surrounded by a World Heritage Rainforest.
- The Bamanga Bubu Ngadimungku dance group is from Wujal Wujal, a small Aboriginal community on the north and south sides of the Bloomfield River approximately 30 kilometres north of Cape Tribulation and 60 kilometres south of Cooktown.
- Hope Vale is situated 46 kilometres north of Cooktown; its people mainly belong to the Guugu Yimidhirr clan.
- Coen is a historic former gold town, the hub of Cape York.
- Aurukun is one of the larger Aboriginal communities in western Cape York, with approximately 1,200 people. It was established as a Presbyterian mission in 1904.
- Lockhart River is a coastal Aboriginal community and the northernmost town on the east coast of Cape York Peninsula with a population of 542, mostly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, whose descendants were forcibly moved to the area beginning in 1924.
- Injinoo is a community at the mouth of Cowal Creek or Small River at the top of Cape York peninsula in Far North Queensland.