Ancient Rock Art - Early Contact - Nanguluwur - Kakadu National Park
by Lexa Harpell
Title
Ancient Rock Art - Early Contact - Nanguluwur - Kakadu National Park
Artist
Lexa Harpell
Medium
Photograph - Photographs
Description
Raw and Untouched Northern Territory Series by Lexa Harpell.
Timeless Kakadu Series by Lexa Harpell.
Rock Art at Nourlangie – Kakadu National Park, Northern Territory, Australia.
Rock Art tells stories, teaches lessons, events, history timeline.
Some of the Rock Art dates back over 20,000 years or maybe more.
Using crushed rocks, ochre, mixed with animal fat, blood, sap.
There are over 860 World Heritage listed sites worldwide. Recognised as places of outstanding value to humanity.
Kakadu National Park is one of only 25 World Heritage sites listed for both cultural and natural values. *Australia has four in this category.
Evidence from findings, ‘Rock Art’ and DNA have proven Australia’s Aboriginal civilization is the oldest on the planet, dating back some 50,000 years.
Cut off from rising sea levels, they became genetically isolated.
Kakadu is not a ‘modern’ tourist park, rather a raw and less touched area of over 20,000 square kms. Only 5% is open to visitors, with some areas 4WD only access.
Pack your hiking boots, be prepared to drive on some unsealed roads, walk or rock scramble to breathtaking scenery.
I’m glad they have kept it as natural and untouched as possible for ‘us’ to witness. Remember this is a natural wilderness.
If you are unsure where you can take a cool dip in the rock pools ASK, ASK, ASK. Never assume you can swim everywhere.
WARNINGS: Crocodiles inhabit the area with signs everywhere to warn you NOT to enter or go near the water – rivers and billabongs.
Saltwater crocodiles are dangerous and deadly. They happen to be the only reptile that has not genetically altered since the Dinosaur Period.
Uploaded
July 6th, 2017
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Viewed 733 Times - Last Visitor from Barrie, ON - Canada on 03/25/2024 at 11:33 PM
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