Vandals destroy Indigenous cave art

Art dating back 22,000 years, which is sacred to First Nations people, has been destroyed by vandals.

The Koonalda Caves holds great spiritual importance to the Mirning people of the Nullabor Plain but it was also critical to archaeological understanding of all indigenous Australians.

Vandals are alleged to have dug under a steel gate earlier this year and completely destroyed a section of delicate finger-marked cave art at the heritage-listed site.

The group graffitied the words “don’t look now, but this is a death cave”.

A South Australian government spokesman said the vandalism was “shocking and heartbreaking”.

“If these vandals can be apprehended they should face the full force of the law,” they said.

In the wake of the vandalism, the SA government said they had consulted Traditional Owners in recent months to develop a plan to “better protect this important site”.

“The existing fencing and general difficulty in accessing the caves deters the vast majority of visitors from trespassing,” the spokesman said.

The destruction has made international headlines and sparked outrage on Twitter.

Live CCTV surveillance is being considered.

Under Australian law, the Mirning people have not been recognised as traditional custodians of the land and still need to request permission from the SA government to access the site.

Koonalda Caves up-ended scientific acceptance of the history of First Nations people as it was the first site that could date indigenous rock art to earlier than 8,000BC.

The art was able to prove that indigenous Australians had existed at least 22,000 years ago.

It is not the first time indigenous art has been destroyed in recent years.

In 2020, mining company Rio Tinto detonated the 46,000-year-old Juukan Gorge Rock shelters to make way for an expansion of an iron ore mine.

 

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