Turning the Corner

  We hit the coast at Karratha, a port for iron ore exports and now also becoming a tourist town.  This is where we ran into lots and lots of tourists with a stream of caravans, camper trailers, motor home, etc going up and down the coast.

  Near Karratha is the Burrup Peninsula with the highest concentration of rock art in the world. The carvings, called petroglyphs, include depictions of human-like figures, human faces and animals that no longer inhabited the region, including the Tasmanian tiger.

   South of Karratha we camped beside the Fortescue River for a couple of nights. The swimming was great and there's plenty of red claw

One or two of the 500,000 petroglyphs on the Burrup Peninsula









The rocks on the peninsula look like they've been dumped there

Tourists.....

Sunset at our Fortescue River campsite


Fortescue River - Our view when waking up in the morning



Exiting our morning tea stop at Cane River


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