in northern Sydney. The two kangaroos suggest this was used for an increase ceremony, whilst the well-endowed man may be
Baiame. The Aboriginal rock engraving sites usually contain images of sacred spiritual beings, mythical ancestral hero figures, various endemic animals, fish and many footprints. Surrounding the rock engravings, there are art sites,
burial sites,
caves, marriage areas, men's areas, women's areas, birthing areas,
midden sites, stone arrangement sites, and tool manufacturing locations. Les McLeod, a local Indigenous guide in
Hawkesbury stated, "A lot of Aboriginal people believe they were created from animals – there are engravings here of wallabies, fish and emus. Sydney sandstone is easy to engrave but easy to fade. The
Guringai people would have visited a couple of times a year to re-engrave it." In some small cave on the water's edge, there are ochre
hand stencils from a group of Guringai men (and from a smaller handprint, a minor). The stencils would have been a way of letting other members of the clan know that this cave or ledge is a safe place to dwell in. Rock paintings of a fish just above the water line signaled to others that fish could be found at this area. The majority (97%) of the etched motifs are outline only. The only systematically infilled engravings are
culture heroes which are usually decorated with a number of pecked lines of dots.
Characteristics Shelters with art are characterised by
stencil art or
charcoal. Stencil is created by mixing
ochre in the mouth and then into a wet paste, where it is sprayed over the object to be stencilled onto the wall of the shelter. Other forms of artwork include
ochre paintings, charcoal drawings and etchings. Rock painting illustration usually feature humans, kangaroos,
emus,
echidnas, grid patterns, animal tracks, boomerangs, axes, hand stencils, among others. Black is the colour most frequently used in Sydney, accounting for 46.2% of the pigment art, followed by white (34.6%), red (16.6%) and yellow (2.8%). There are also a number of
grinding grooves located throughout the general Sydney area. Burial sites are present throughout the Sydney region, and many have been found over the past years in middens and within shelters. Rock engravings in Sydney often featured fish, animals, humans, wooden artefacts, and mythological beings. Stone quarries are sites where Aboriginals accumulate types of
stone for the manufacturing of tools, ceremonial and sacred items. The majority of the fine stone flakes and tools recovered in the local area would have been traded from other areas such as the north coast,
Hunter Valley, and the
Nepean River.
Dug wells in the Sydney region were used by the local tribe to sharpen tools and also as a source of fresh
drinking water.
Motif frequency A total of 7,804 motifs were studied from the 717 engravings sites, with a salient focus on tracks, followed by a predilection for
marine animals and land animals,
anthropomorphic models and cultural items. ==Sites==