Mellong Range Shelter with Art
A complex Aboriginal art shelter in the Mellong Range, which has multiple stencils including hands and a boomerang and human figures in charcoal and white ochre.
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.
A complex Aboriginal art shelter in the Mellong Range, which has multiple stencils including hands and a boomerang and human figures in charcoal and white ochre.
A bushfire-damaged trig station, Toorwai Trig is a short walk from the Mellong Range Trail off Putty Road.
Aboriginal rock art comprising multiple weathered hand stencils and two white lines in a low shelter.
Hidden in scrub not far from the Grassy Hill Fire Trail (which is off Putty Road) is the Grassy Hill Trig.
A small Aboriginal rock art site along a low cliff line above the Wollangambe River, which has multiple hand stencils and a stone axe.
A partly off-track walk in Mount Irvine, which passes Tesselate Hill before reaching the Tesselated Pavements. It then continues along the ridge to the Unnamed HIll at the end.
Tesselate Hill (or Tesselated Pavements) has an Aboriginal engraving and many grinding grooves over the large rock surface.
Particularly impressive after heavy rain, Sixty Foot Falls in Mittagong has a main drop of almost 20m, followed by a smaller cascade. You can swim below the waterfall, but the Nattai River does suffer from pollution.
A series of Aboriginal grinding grooves sites and an engraving site along The Pinnacle on the Mount Hay Range.
Four Aboriginal grinding groove sites along a series of long rock ledges near Flat Rock on the Hay Ridge