Red Hands Cave is an Australian Aboriginal rock art site in the Blue Labyrinth area of Blue Mountains National Park.
It is a rock shelter located within walking distance from the town of Glenbrook, New South Wales.
[1][2] The ochre handprints and stencils at Red Hands Cave were painted around 500–1,600 years B.P.
[3][4] The cave was first discovered by white Australians on 10 August 1913, when James (Jim) Colquhoun Dunn (1892-1978) went searching for Ruby Gladys Hunter (1892–1973), who became lost in the bush near Glenbrook while collecting wild flowers with her two dogs.
[1]: 81 In the early 1930s, the Blue Mountains Shire Council installed a wire screen fence at the cave to protect it from vandalism.