Canarvon Gorge Rock Pool – the only place to swim!
A beautiful, shaded swimming hole along Carnarvon Creek, the Rock Pool is the only place in the national park where swimming is permitted.
A beautiful, shaded swimming hole along Carnarvon Creek, the Rock Pool is the only place in the national park where swimming is permitted.
A short, off-track walk past an Aboriginal rock art site to the top of Clematis Ridge, which offers spectacular Carnarvon Gorge views.
Boolimba Bluff offers sweeping views over Carnarvon Gorge and out to the Expedition Range. Best at sunrise or sunset, it’s reached via a track with one steep section up through a slot in the cliff-line.
A spectacular bushwalk through the Carnarvon Gorge in Central Queensland, the Main Track passes narrow slot canyons, two incredible Aboriginal art sites and a lookout over the gorge. The Main Track can be done as a long day-walk, an overnight walk or split over a couple of days.
Cathedral Cave is an immense and spectacular Aboriginal rock art site along the Carnarvon Gorge Main Track. It has over 1,500 motifs including stencils, paintings, engravings and a drawing of a human or spirit figure.
The spectacular Art Gallery Aboriginal art site in Carnarvon Gorge contains almost 2,000 motifs. They include ochre stencils, freehand paintings and rock engravings.
A publicly accessible (but not signposted) Aboriginal rock art site in Carnarvon Gorge, the Clematis Ridge site has over 100 stencils.
Cathedral Rock is better known for its weathered and fractured sandstone surface, but also has Aboriginal hand strencils at its base.
The only “must do” bushwalk in the Mount Moffat section of Carnarvon National Park, the Maranoa River circuit track passes by The Chimneys and the Looking Glass, and a spectacular Aboriginal rock art site (The Tombs).
A spectacular Aboriginal rock art site, The Tombs in the Mount Moffat section of Carnarvon National Park has over 400 stencils. The site has the only full adult body stencil known to exist in the world.