Thursday, Dec 28, 2023 at 22:16
Bill (et al),
I've had the pleasure of visiting the petroglyphs at Thomas Reservoir in the Cleland's back in 2014 with appropriate permissions and in the company of
well known
Alice Springs Historian Dick Kimber. Certainly an amazing place and one first discovered and reported (from a European perspective) by Richard Thelwell Maurice in his 1902 expedition from
Fowlers Bay to Cambridge Gulf. The carvings are extraordinary but definitely follow a theme I've seen in many other locations particularly in the gorges of the Calvert Ranges and Constance Headland.
While with Dick and Marg Kimber, we also covered off on a bit of David
Carnegie (
Stansmore Range) and Michael Terry out around
Lake Mackay, Wills and White as we pushed through the
Sydney Margaret Range to
Lake Jeavons and the abandoned Pallottine station of 'Ngulpi'. Our search for Terry's 'Chugga Kurri' and Labbi Labbi
Rockhole often left us wondering to as to the fertile imagination of Mr Terry abut on reflection, his was description of the countryside was probably no less 'romantic' in description than that of Ernest Giles.
While we located many features described by Terry, even more eluded us and cost a few tyres!
The expedition from UoS actually went out to the Clelands in the early 1960's and was led by Anthropologist Dr. Neil William "Black Mac" Macintosh See below.
"After much lobbying Terry finally persuaded anatomist Professor NWG Macintosh of
Sydney University and Bob Edwards of the South Australian Museum to visit the site, supported by the South Australian Museum and Australian Institute for Aboriginal Studies. They documented the
Cleland Hills as a major site with 387 engravings, including 16 stylised faces. Edwards affirmed their great age but did not support Terry’s ideas about their foreign, non-Aboriginal origin [Edwards 1968]."
I've embedded a video from that expedition which shows Labbi Labbi and the overlook across Chugga Kurri. The cairn in the video is actually the "Beacon" constructed above Labbi Labbi in 1957 by Chris Armstrong, surveyor with Thomson Anthropological Expedition to contact the local Pintubi Tribe, many of whom had had no contact with Europeans.
Cheers
Mick
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