Photo: Sardaka / CC BY-SA 4.0
Deep in the red desert of the Northern Territory, Ewaninga Rock Carvings Conservation Reserve protects one of the region's most significant Aboriginal rock art sites. The ancient petroglyphs — intricate carvings of circles, animal tracks, and geometric patterns — are etched into sandstone outcrops that rise from the spinifex plains. This is a place of profound silence and spiritual resonance, where you can walk among carvings believed to be thousands of years old. The reserve is unstaffed, so you'll have the site largely to yourself; bring plenty of water and a deep respect for this living cultural landscape.
Highlights & What to See
- Petroglyph panels – The main attraction: hundreds of carvings of circles, dots, emu and kangaroo tracks, and linear designs that tell stories of the Arrernte people's Dreaming.
- Sandstone outcrops – The weathered rock formations themselves are striking, with hues of ochre and orange that shift with the desert light.
- Interpretive signs – A short walking trail is lined with informative panels explaining the carvings' meanings and the cultural protocols for visiting.
- Desert silence – The profound quiet and vast horizons offer a meditative experience unique to this remote reserve.
Suggested Time to Spend
Allow 1–2 hours to walk the short loop trail (about 800 metres) and absorb the carvings at a contemplative pace. The site is best visited in the early morning or late afternoon to avoid the midday heat and to see the carvings in dramatic low-angle light. Combine with a half-day drive from Alice Springs, as the reserve is 35 kilometres south along the Old South Road.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Alice Springs – The gateway town, with the Araluen Cultural Precinct and the Royal Flying Doctor Service Museum.
- Chambers Pillar Historical Reserve – A towering sandstone column 40 km south, also rich in Aboriginal and explorer history.
- Rainbow Valley Conservation Reserve – Multicoloured sandstone cliffs 75 km south-west, stunning at sunset.
- Simpson Desert – For 4WD adventurers, the edge of this vast dune desert begins east of the reserve.
- MacDonnell Ranges – East and west ranges offer gorges, waterholes, and hiking trails within easy reach of Alice Springs.
Please check official sources for current details.
Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.
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Image credits
- Alice Springs — Bahnfrend / CC BY-SA 4.0
- Chambers Pillar Historical Reserve — No machine-readable author provided. Casliber assumed (based on copyright claims). / Public domain
- Rainbow Valley Conservation Reserve — Brian W. Schaller / FAL
- Simpson Desert — Christopher Watson ( http://www.comebirdwatching.blogspot.com/ ) / CC BY-SA 3.0
- MacDonnell Ranges — Hesperian / CC BY-SA 3.0
- Arltunga Historical Reserve — Robin Smith Collection, Northern Territory Library / Public domain