“The vandals caused a huge amount of damage. The art is not recoverable,” Walshe told Guardian Australia.
“The surface of the cave is very soft. It is not possible to remove the graffiti without destroying the art underneath. It’s a massive, tragic loss to have it defaced to this degree.”
Evidence suggestsFinger marks inside Koonalda Cave Australia circa 20,000 BC. Ancient indigenous Australians looking for flint within the cave pressed their fingers into the soft limestone wall. pic.twitter.com/FxjEYeDwbT — Randy The Atheist (@RTheatheist) October 28, 2022Uncle Bunna Lawrie
“Me and my Mirning Elders are very sad, disturbed and hurt by what has happened,” he said.
“I am a custodian of Koonalda and my ancestors have protected this place for tens of thousands of years. [We’ve] kept it beautiful and sacred.”
“It is not coming back.
“It is one of the oldest cave arts in the world and it is now damaged. It is so wrong. We will now seek help to investigate, as we see this as a criminal offence and abuse to our Mirning culture.”
far from the first timeVandals destroyed sacred artwork in South Australia thought to be 30,000 yrs old. The Nullarbor Plain art, designs carved into chalk limestone walls of the Koonalda Cave, has special significance for the region’s Aboriginal Mirning people. pic.twitter.com/B52LqTIh1w
— Rita Rosenfeld (@rheytah) December 21, 2022
“Over recent months the South Australian government has been consulting Traditional Owners and other stakeholders on developing a comprehensive plan to better protect this important site,” the spokesperson said.
“The existing fencing and general difficulty in accessing the caves deters the vast majority of visitors from trespassing. Live monitoring of the site via closed-circuit cameras is being considered to better protect the cave.”
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