Summary: Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo on a sloping rock face near Mount White.
Site type: Rock engraving
Number of motifs: 1
Motif/s: Kangaroo
Quality: 2/5
Condition of site: Good
Year first recorded: 1976
Originally Recorded by: Ian Sim
Sim Reference: Sim Collection Site 5/39 S1
Ian Sim, Archaelogical Sites in the Sydney Region – A Record of Field Surveys 1958-1973 (“Sim Collection”), Site 5/39 Series 1 (Mooney Mooney – Mount White) p.39
A large, sloping platform to the south-west of Mount White is an Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo.
It may have been documented by Ian Sim, who recorded a “kangaroo and man” around this location across two sites – but the man could not be found.
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.
Many sites Aboriginal engraving sites across the inner suburbs of Sydney have been destroyed or are very weatheredl. The sites which remain are isolated from their natural environment.
The Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area protects over 3,000 known Aboriginal heritage sites, and many more which are yet to be recorded. This area includes the Blue Mountains National Park, Gardens of Stone, Wollemi National Park and Yengo National Park.
There are about 300 recorded Aboriginal heritage sites in Wollemi National Park, with the rugged and remote environment meaning many sites are yet to be "discovered" and recorded.
The Blue Mountains National Park (and surrounding areas along the Great Western Highway) is thought to have over a thousand indigenous heritage sites, although much of the park has not been comprehensively surveyed. The Aboriginal rock sites in the Blue Mountains include grinding grooves, stensils, drawing and rock carvings.
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