There are thousands of Aboriginal engraving and shelter art sites recorded around Gosford and across the Central Coast region. These rock art sites include animals, birds, sea creatures, bird tracks, human footsteps, male and female figures, hunting weapons and ancestral beings. Many sites are protected in the national parks of the Central Coast, but a surprisingly large number of recorded sites are on rural properties and industrial estates.

Many of the sites were documented by W. D. Campbell in 1899, and later by Fred McCarthy and Ian Sim.  The Central Coast Original Recordings page lists all the publicly documented Campbell, Sim and McCarthy sites.

An article by Coast Magazine (Ancient Art Galleries of the Central Coastdownload PDF or read online) covers some of the significant rock art sites of the Central Coast area.

Aboriginal rock art sites by park: Bouddi NP /  Brisbane Water  / McPherson SF / Popran NP / Strickland SF

An Aboriginal engraving of a koala on a sloping rock platform above Narara Creek.
A single figure of a man engraved on a small rock platform above Narara Creek.
Small Aboriginal engraving of a wallaby, which has no front legs.
Above the Gosford Railway Dams in Narara is an Aboriginal engraving site which includes a speared man, eel and fish.
Above the Gosford Railway Dams in Narara is a long wave-like shelter with a significant amount of Aboriginal art, in white and red ochre, and charcoal.
A small shelter with Aboriginal charcoal drawings in the McPherson State Forest, near the Crane Ridge Trail.
A complex and spectacular Aboriginal Shelter with Art near the Strickland State Forest. The site contains over 60 motifs in white ochre and charcoal.
Over 20 axe grinding grooves in the bed of a creek near Mangrove Road (Niagara Park).
A signposted rock engraving site in Bouddi National Park, the North West Ridge Aboriginal Site has four figures - but only a 4m orca is still visible.
A sacred Aboriginal engraving site in Somersby, which has a large Daramulan figure.
A sloping rock platform near Debenham Road South, which has about 10 Aboriginal engravings (including an emu and multiple fish).
A significant Aboriginal engraving site in Somersby, which includes a large bird of ceremonial significance and an anthropomorphic "spirit figure".
A large rock platform near Debenham Road South, which has a single Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo.
Two adjacent shelters with Aboriginal rock art in the Ourimbah State Forest; the main shelter has over 40 motifs in charcoal and red ochre.
A small Aboriginal rock art shelter in Ourimbah State Forest which resembles a breaking wave. It has three charcoal motifs.