Murujuga, commonly known as the Burrup peninsula near Karratha, holds the largest concentration of ancient rock art in the world – 2,500 registered Aboriginal heritage sites.
The art depicts the oldest known images of the human face, and shows extinct megafauna, Indigenous hunting traditions, Tasmanian tigers, mathematical representations and geometric forms.
A Senate inquiry is currently investigating the impact of a new ammonium nitrate plant, run by the Norwegian fertiliser company Yara International.
Prof John Black warned that emissions from the plant would cause microbial growth on the rock surfaces, destroying their “desert varnish” and placing the art at serious risk.
Black provided damning evidence to the inquiry that three CSIRO reports used to justify Yara’s plant were flawed “in terms of scientific methods, analyses and/or interpretations”.
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