Caleyi Trail Kangaroos
Carvings of two kangaroos, one of which was described by W.D. Campbell as having a spear in its back.
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.
Carvings of two kangaroos, one of which was described by W.D. Campbell as having a spear in its back.
Located on the edge of a ledge, with views over Garigal NP, is an Aboriginal engraving site with a couple of quite well-defined shields, a kangaroo and a boomerang.
On one of the rock platforms along the Little Moab Track is a school of (four) whales and a deity figure… the engravings are very faint and weathered and hard to make out.
A very weathered engraving of a whale and its calf, on the headland at La Perouse.
A large rock located in the Lane Cove National Park, which has both Aboriginal and European engravings.
A quite clearly defined kangaroo, and some smaller engravings, next to the Max Allen Track on a small rock
Located to the north-west of Sydney, just south of the Dharug and Yengo National Parks, Maroota has a high concentration of (known) Aboriginal sites. Many more Aboriginal heritage sites are located in the Marramarra National Park. The original inhabitants of the area were the Darug people.
Yengo National Park was an important spiritual and cultural place for the Darkinjung and Wonnarua People for thousands of years, and 640 Aboriginal cultural sites are recorded in the park and nearby areas.
There are over 350 Aboriginal engraving and sites recorded in the Central Coast region, many of these in the Brisbane Water National Park.
Hundreds of Aboriginal rock art sites have been recorded in the Hornsby region, with many of these in the Berowra Valley National Park.