Summary: A large rock platform near Debenham Road South, which has a single Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo.

An Aboriginal engraving sites described by Ian Sim as being north of the Old Gosford Road (now Debenham Road South), which has a single figure.

A kangaroo is now partly buried by silt, and appears not to have not a line connecting its front legs to its back legs. (Photo bottom right by Bob Pankhurst.)

Although the head is quite lightly grooved, the kangaroo’s two ears are visible.

Subscribe via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to Hiking the World, and receive notifications of new posts by email. (A hike is added every 1-2 weeks, on average.)

Join 1,267 other subscribers

0 Comments

Leave a Reply

Aboriginal Sites by National Park

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.
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.
Over 40 sites have been recorded within the park; many were located along the river bank and were flooded by the building of the weir in 1938.
Red Hands Cave, Glenbrook (Blue Mountains)
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.