Aboriginal rock art site vandalised

Share |  

A sacred Aboriginal rock art site in Western Australia has been defaced with graffiti.

VANDALS ARE DEFACING ANCIENT rock engravings on the Burrup Peninsula, leaving stark reminders in graffiti that the National Heritage-listed area lacks effective protection.  

Greens MP and rock art researcher Robin Chapple says he recently visited the site in northwest Western Australia, and discovered the word 'Philomena' scratched on the surface of a rock.

"Other visitors had been there a week before and not seen this damage, so it was done in the days before my visit," says Robin. More cases of defaced rocks were spotted nearby in Climbing Man Valley, one of the most spectacular rock art galleries in the state.  

The Burrup has the largest concentration of rock 'carvings' in the world, which include lively etched images of humans, birds, mammals, fish and abstract patterns that Aboriginal people are believed to have carved between 6,000-20,000 years ago. A gas processing plant, a port and other industry is also located on the peninsula.

Endangered heritage

Damaging rock art is an offence under the Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 and penalties range from $20,000 to $40,000 and imprisonment for nine months to two years. The Department of Indigenous Affairs (DIA) says it takes reports of damage seriously and "will follow up on reported damage, including graffiti at the Burrup."

Last year, a cement company agreed to pay $280,000 in remediation after it admitted it had damaged rock art during quarrying operations on the Burrup.

"A major problem is that due to the resource boom, we have a lot of people with no knowledge of the Aboriginal heritage value of the area or its international importance," says Robin. "In human terms it is the equivalent of vandalising Stonehenge or the Pyramids."

He says the precinct remains on the World Monument Fund's list of 100 Most Endangered Places in the World - the only such site in Australia - because of continued mismanagement of the heritage and conservation values of the Burrup.

Local threats

The Centre for Rock Art Studies at the University of Western Australia has also sounded a warning that increased human traffic in remote parts of the Pilbara and Kimberley is a major threat to rock art.  "Vandalism and dust from busy roads are now two of the biggest threats to rock art in the north of the state," says Associate Professor Jane Balme.

She says the Burrup graffiti shows a deep disrespect for the traditional owners of the art and for world heritage. "One of the aims of our work in the Pilbara is to educate people who do not understand the value of this art to learn to appreciate its values. In my view, that often works better than just telling people what they can or cannot do."

A DIA spokesman says a companies must produce a cultural heritage management plan as a condition of receiving approvals for major projects under the Aboriginal Heritage Act.

But Robin Chapple says rangers need to be installed on site and cultural programs stepped up. "People need to be made aware that they are desecrating a place of international importance."


RELATED ARTICLES
Risks to major rock art site debated

Aboriginal massacre site commemorated
Top 10 Aboriginal bush medicines
Aboriginal archaeology group created
From the spellbinding sandstone beehives of Purnululu in the Kimberley, to the rugged isolation of the Baxter cliffs and the Southern Ocean, the spectacular scenery in WA is as vast as the state is large. The Cape to Cape track, the arid central deserts of the Nullarbor Plain, the Stirling Range, and the remote Buccaneer Archipelago are just some of the unique sights this state of immense contrasts has to offer.
Rate this Article
Your Rating:
star
Average Rating:
stars
Share |  
If you'd like to comment on this article, please log in or register with Australian Geographic - we'd love to hear your opinion.

Comments 6

  • Well, it's sort of art, not much different to a turtle or a serpent really. In 100 thousand years people will be thrilled when find it! Report

     
  • No respect, no sense of wonderment at the age of the rock art. How depressing. Report

     
  • it good Report

     
  • it good Report

     
  • it good Report

     
  • I have not had the privilege of visiting the Burrup Peninsula. However, I have seen the rock art at Ubirr, in Kakadu. Their defacement is sacrilege. These sites are every bit as important as Stonehenge or the Pyramids. I believe people DO need to be educated. The fact that vandals have access to these very special places should not be tolerated. Report

     

SAVE UP TO 33% TODAY!


Subscribe or renew your subscription to Australian Geographic, with the choice of receiving an EXCLUSIVE AG UMBRELLA!



CHOOSE THE OFFER THAT SUITS YOU!

• Receive an AG umbrella with 6 issues and SAVE 22%
OR
• Receive 6 issues with no gift and SAVE 33%
The choice is yours!


 
Advertisement

E-Newsletter

Get Australian Geographic in your inbox

Sample issue


From the Video Library

Hippos in the surf

Photographers hit the beach in search of hippos in the surf for a new documentary, Africa: Eye to Eye with the Unknown.
View larger video

Facebook

Twitter

  • Work has halted on a proposed iron ore mine in Tasmania's fragile Tarkine region. http://t.co/aPkZ4O8tEn

    Posted on 22 May 2013

AG Publications
  • Discovery Series Promo Pod
  • Books-Promo-Pod
  • All-About-Book-Series
  • nation-in-the-making-promotions-pod
  • activity-books-publications-pod

Latest Articles