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An expert in rock art has accused the WA government of burying elements of a report that shows current pollution levels in the state's north is degrading ancient rock art. Professor Benjamin Smith ...
For years Murujuga elders and scientists have been trying to determine whether industrial development on the Burrup Peninsula over the past 60 years is degrading ancient rock art. The latest ...
Friends of Sierra Rock Art (FSRA) are serious about protecting the local and semi-local petroglyphs that date back to the year 2000 B.C. Bill Drake is a co-founder of FSRA and was pleased to reveal ...
Until now, research on rock art and burials in north Africa focused on areas like the Nile Valley, the Sahara or the Atlas Mountains. Our discoveries reveal that Morocco’s north-western coast ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. A world-renowned rock art specialist has accused the Cook government of trying to cover up the extent of damage from industrial ...
A bid to compel the government to consider a heritage application to protect Indigenous rock art is going to court as three environmental activists declare they 'successfully hoaxed' Woodside.
A professor of archaeology has accused a state government of lying in a report about the impact of industrial emissions on Aboriginal rock art. UWA professor of archaeology Benjamin Smith said he ...
CEO and Co-Founder of Globe Entertainment & Media Corp. "By joining forces with Hard Rock, we're giving these incredible images a global stage, while entering an exciting new era where art ...
The latest findings from the Western Australian government-backed Murujuga Rock Art Monitoring Program – which studies whether emissions from heavy industry on the Burrup Peninsula are ...
Federal Environment Minister Murray Watt has accused a United Nations-linked international cultural heritage organisation of putting the Murujuga rock art gallery ... Getty Images The bid ...
they’ve discovered even more art in 19th Unnamed Cave—this time, images that are all but invisible to the naked eye, in a place never thought to be home to life-sized rock art. Over 5,000 ...
On Labor Day weekend in 1972 a crowd estimated at over 200,000 gathered along the Wabash River in Southern Indiana to attend what would come to be known as the Bull Island Rock Festival.
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