[1][2] The site is the resting place for the repatriated and reburied remains of 38 Aboriginal People of Victoria, marked by a memorial plaque embedded in a large granite boulder.
[5] In Australia, a campaign to have government laws enacted to return the remains of Aboriginal People held in collections from museums, universities and other places succeeded.
[1][2] Thereafter during 1985, legal proceedings undertaken by the Koorie Heritage Trust resulted in Melbourne Museum returning to Aboriginal Victorians the 38 individual skeletal remains it held in its anthropological collection.
[3] A number of Aboriginal Victorians led by Jim Berg, a Gunditjmara Elder, were involved in making an application to rebury the remains in Melbourne City gardens.
[10] The boulder with its rough granite contours, partially embedded in the land link it as a continuation of the surrounding terrain, in comparison with the European style monuments of Kings Domain that have a superimposed appearance on the landscape.
[11] Referring to the event as "Stolenwealth Games", the Black GST set up Camp Sovereignty and established a fire that later was put out by local authorities.