Hawkesbury Track Grinding Grooves
Multiple Aboriginal axe grinding grooves on a large rock platform along the Hawkesbury Track.
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.
Multiple Aboriginal axe grinding grooves on a large rock platform along the Hawkesbury Track.
An Aboriginal engraving site next to the Tommos Loop track which has two circles; nearby is an axe grinding groove.
An Aboriginal engraving of an enormous (but incomplete) whale and three kangaroos above Tommos Loop in Brisbane Water NP.
An Aboriginal engraving site above Tommos Loop, which has a large marine creature and some smaller figures.
The Nepean Narrows Lookout provides a view over the Nepean River, towards the narrow point where it meets Glenbrook Creek. It’s reached by a 12-16km bushwalk (mostly on firetrails).
Rileys Mountain Lookout is the highest of a series of lookouts in Mulgoa (the most eastern section of the Blue Mountains) which overlook the Nepean River.
A short walk takes you to the top of The Rock Lookout in the Blue Mountains, which offers sweeping views over the Nepean River.
Rileys Mountain Track passes multiple lookouts over the Nepean River, as it follows a ridge above the river. It’s mostly on a firetrail, with a few sections of bushwalking track.
The Mulgoa trig station is on top of Rileys Mountain, on the eastern of the Nepean River in the Blue Mountains National Park.
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.