Although the quantity and density of surviving Aboriginal rock art sites in the Hornsby Shire is significantly lower than on the Central Coast, there were 598 recorded sites with art in the 2023 Hornsby Shire Aboriginal Heritage Study (compared to 454 in a previous 1996 study). The Hornsby area was inhabited by the Darug and GuriNgai people, and the art is thought to date back to the early Bondaian period (8,000 to 4,000 years ago) up to post-European contact.

Total Sites Non-NPWS Land
Art
598
205
Grinding Grooves
125
56
Modified Tree
9
7
Stone Arrangement
16
2

The rock art of the Hornsby Shire was originally documented by W.D. Campbell, R.H. Mathews and R.E. Etheridge in the 1880s to early 1900s and later by John Tipper, Fred McCarthy and Ian Sim in the mid-twentieth century. More recently, archaeologist Jo McDonald conducted extensive research on and excavated a number of sites in the Sydney Basin, whch included several in the Hornsby LGA.

The list below includes all of the Aboriginal rock art sites within the Hornsby LGA; or you can view sites located in specific National Parks:  

Multiple fish engraved on a vertical rock surface near Berowra Waters, including a fish within a larger fish.
An Aboriginal rock art site near Berowra Waters with what appears to be the lower part of a human figure, and multiple fish.
An Aboriginal rock art site near Berowra Waters with three charcoal shields in a low shelter.
Behind a row of houses is a large rock platform with a small number of engravings including fish and a kangaroo.
An Aboriginal engraving site below Blake Ridge (in Marramarra NP), which depicts a group of five eels.
Boomerang Cave (Apple Tree Bay) has white stencils of four hands, a boomerang and a hafted axe
Above a small waterfall near Brooklyn Dam are Aboriginal engravings of a fish and wallaby (or kangaroo), and some water channels in the creek bed.
A long rock platform near the Brooklyn Dam is an Aboriginal engraving site, with over 20 figures. Many were recorded by McCarthy in 1958.
An Aboriginal engraving of a fish hooked on a line, on a vertical rock along Calabash Creek.
A small and shallow shelter near Calabash Creek, which contains a single hand stencil.
A small but deep shelter near Calabash Creek, which has a small panel of Aboriginal rock art with stencils and drawings.
Very weathered Aboriginal rock engravings of a kangaroo and an indeterminate object on a rock platform next to the Calabash Trail.
Weathered Aboriginal engravings on a rock platform next to the Calabash Trail, including an eel-like figure.
An oval-shaped Aboriginal rock engraving near the Callicoma Trail in Cherrybrook.
A single Aboriginal hand stencil in red ochre near the Callicoma Trail in Cherrybrook.

1 Comment

veronica · June 3, 2025 at 12:14 pm

wow!!! this is so cool!

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