Aboriginal Rock Art – Bouddi National Park
Bouddi National Park and the surrounding area has over 100 Aboriginal sites, including rock shelters, rock engravings, middens and grinding grooves.
The Garigal National Park is a protected national park that is located within the North Shore and Forest District regions of Sydney, New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The 2,202-hectare (5,440-acre) national park is situated approximately 20 kilometres (12 mi) north of the Sydney central business district.
Bouddi National Park and the surrounding area has over 100 Aboriginal sites, including rock shelters, rock engravings, middens and grinding grooves.
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Garigal National Park in Sydney’s north is the fifth largest park in the Sydney metropolitan area. Within the park are over 40 bushwalking trails and mountain-biking tracks covering 120km, as well as many lookouts and places to kayak.
A solitary Aboriginal engraving of what may be a kangaroo, or a marine creature. The site is near the head of the Powder Works Valley.
A relatively new trig station built in 1979, which is in scrub just above the Wakehurst Parkway.
An unusual rock engraving site above Bantry Bay, which is within a low shelter. The figures include two echidnsas and boomerangs,
An overhang above Bantry Bay, which has sixteen well-preserved Aboriginal stencils in red ochre.
Interpreted as a hunting scene, this small Aboriginal engraving site near the Cook Street Trail features a large emu/turtle, superimposed with a man (or hunter). Nearby sre two snakes.