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  3. Engraved whale at Balls Head, Port Jackson

Engraved whale at Balls Head, Port Jackson

By
Val Attenbrow
Contributed By
Australian Museum

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Archaeological evidence of Aboriginal life in Sydney
Subjects
Aboriginal Archaeology National Parks and Reserves Sandstone Visual Arts
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Balls Head

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Attenbrow, Val

Val Attenbrow is an archaeologist and principal research scientist at the Australian Museum in Sydney.

Australian Museum

Archaeological evidence of Aboriginal life in Sydney

The lives, activities and material culture of the people who lived in the Sydney area for thousands of years before Europeans arrived are only revealed by archaeological evidence. Sydney has many diverse sites where physical evidence of the first inhabitants can be found, revealing much about their technologies, diets, cultures and occupations, and how these changed in the centuries before European settlement changed everything.

Aboriginal

National Parks and Reserves

Sandstone

Archaeology

Visual Arts

Balls Head

Point on the Parramatta River west of McMahons Point. It was named after Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, who discovered Lord Howe Island in 1788.

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