Pogson Trig Waterhole
Grooved water channel and axe grinding grooves on a rock platform near the Pogson Trig Firetrail.
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) is part of Department of Planning, Industry and Environment. NPWS manages more than 870 NSW national parks and reserves, covering over 7 million hectares of land.
Grooved water channel and axe grinding grooves on a rock platform near the Pogson Trig Firetrail.
An Aboriginal engraving of a single wallaby, which is fairly weathed; it’s one of a series of eleven sites documented by Ian Sim near the Lyre Trig.
An interesting Aboriginal engraving site which has 14 figures, including a marine creature (which could be a shark), a snake and an indeterminate animal. It’s one of a series of eleven sites documented by Ian Sim near the Lyre Trig.
An Aboriginal engraving of a man and a “composite emu spirit figure”; it’s one of a series of eleven sites documented by Ian Sim near the Lyre Trig.
A short, dog-friendly loop track though a small reserve in Ku-ring-gai. The Blackbutt Creek Track follows Blackbutt Creek and Falls Creek through tall forest,
A complex and likely significant Aboriginal engraving site below the Lyre Trig in Kariong. The site has over sixty figures and 10 axe grinding grooves.
An Aboriginal engraving of a single fish; one of a series of eleven sites documented by Ian Sim near the Lyre Trig.
The area around Lyre Trig has over twenty Aboriginal engraving sites, many recorded by Campbell, Sim and McCarthy and some containing unusual carvings.
Two very weathered wallabies near the Lyre Trig Firetrail.
A large Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo near the Lyre Trig Track; possibly a mythological figure due to its size.