Red Hands Cave (West Head)
One of the best showcases of Aboriginal art in the area, the singposted Red Hands Cave at West Head has multiple red ochre handprints.
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.
One of the best showcases of Aboriginal art in the area, the singposted Red Hands Cave at West Head has multiple red ochre handprints.
Over 40 sites have been recorded within the park; many were located along the river bank and were flooded by the building of the weir in 1938.
Washtub Gully near Berowra Waters has a number of Aboriginal engravings in a creek bed
Behind a row of houses is a large rock platform with a small number of engravings including fish and a kangaroo.
A signposted site next to Quarter Sessions Road has an Aboriginal engraving depicting a pair of leaping kangaroos.
An unusual Aboriginal engraving site on a vertical rock surface, which includes a Baiame and Daramulan figure.
Barnetts Shelter (SWA) has a small number of charcoal motifs in a sandstone overhang in Berowra Valley National Park.
An extensive group of engravings, the Mooney Mooney Aboriginal Area includes many kangaroos, two rainbow serpents and many other figures.
Located on a vertical rock face in the Bobbin Head Marina carpark is an engraving of a fish, mammal and goanna
The Girrakool Aboriginal site has a carving of a man located on a rock platform along the Girrakool Loop walking track.