The latest indigenous sites I’ve visited and documented, with links to historical records where available. To find a specific site or search by site features, use the Indigenous Site Search.

Newspaper Rock is a prominent boulder above the Virgin River, which has over 50 petroglyphs representing animals, people and geoemetric shapes.
The Da Vinci Panel, located in the Beaver Dam Mountains Wilderness in Utah, is an unusual vertical panel with a petroglyph that resembles Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man.
The spectacular Great Galley rock art site in Horseshoe Canyon is a shallow, north-facing rockshelter with numerous Barrier Canyon Style anthropomorphs and quadrupeds, mainly arranged in groups or rows for a distance of approximately 60m.
Alcove Gallery, situated at Barrier Creek in Horseshoe Canyon at the base of enormous shelter, features Barrier Canyon Style rock art.
Horseshoe Gallery in Horseshoe Canyon features diverse pictographs and petroglyphs from Barrier, Anasazi, and Fremont cultures.
High Gallery in Horseshoe Canyon features ancient Barrier Canyon Style art, including anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figures.
An impressive shelter with Aboriginal rock art near Christys Gully. There are over 30 motifs including hand stencils and paintings in red ochre, white ochre and charcoal.
An isolated shelter in thick scrub near Christys Gully Firetrail, which has a charcoal drawing of a kangaroo.
An Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo near the end of the Christys Gully Firetrail.
An Aboriginal engraving of a fish on an enormous rock platform along the Christys Gully Firetrail.
A long cliff-top rock platform above Christys Gully which has multiple grooved channels and two very weathered Aboriginal engravings.
A small cliff-top ledge above Christys Gully which has two Aboriginal engravings and a single grinding groove.
A long rock platform above Christys Gully, which has multiple Aboriginal engravings including eels and kangaroos.
An Aboriginal engraving along the Christys Gully Firetrail on the Central Coast with two back-to-back male profile figures.
An Aboriginal engraving along the Christys Gully Firetrail on the Central Coast with two small fish.
An Aboriginal engraving site near Christys Gully on the Central Coast; most of the figures are very weathered.
A long, low shelter with Aboriginal rock art near Christys Gully which has multiple charcoal and red ochre paintings.
On a large rock platform along Christys Gully Firetrail is an oval or ray-like Aboriginal engraving and a set of grinding grooves.
An Aboriginal engraving of a human figure on a rock platform along Christys Gully Firetrail.
Aboriginal engraving of a kangaroo (and fish) on a rock platfom above Kellys Creek.

INDIGENOUS SITES BY PARK

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.
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Hornsby Shire - which is the largest LGA in the Greater Sydney Metropolitan region - contains approximately 600 recorded Aboriginal rock art sites (and over 1,200 Aboriginal heritage sites). These date back from thousands of years to post-European contact art.
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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.
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Located to the north-west of Sydney, just south of the Dharug and Yengo National Parks, Maroota has a high concentration of (known) Aboriginal sites. Many more Aboriginal heritage sites are located in the Marramarra National Park. The original inhabitants of the area were the Darug people.