Lyre Trig Lizard
An Aboriginal engraving of a goanna or lizard near Lyre Trig
The Brisbane Water National Park is a protected national park located in the Central Coast region of NSW, 47km north of Sydney. It has many bushwalks, and a large number of Aboriginal heritage sites.
An Aboriginal engraving of a goanna or lizard near Lyre Trig
An interesting Aboriginal engraving site near Lyre Trig in Kariong; it depicts what appears to be a copulating couple.
An Aboriginal engraving of a fish and an oval below Lyre Trig; it is one of a series of eleven sites documented by Ian Sim.
A small Aboriginal engraving site near the Lyre Trig in Kariong, which has a mundoe and a kangaroo.
A single Aboriginal engraving of a man below Lyre Trig in Kariong, first documented by W.D. Campbell in 1899.
An Aboriginal engraving site in Kariong, which has a pair of emus situated on what was an old road.
An Aboriginal engraving of an indeterminate figure near the top of an unnamed hill to the east of Woy Woy Road
A single kangaroo on a rock ledge overlooking Brisbane Water, below Woy Woy Road. Located in thick scrub and hard to reach.
A single mundoe (footprint) on a rock ledge in Kariong; it may form part of a series of mundoes
This Aboriginal engraving site has multiple figures in the bed of a creek, including two unusual male figures and three eels