Ancient stone arrangement in Victoria damaged The Guardian Traditional owners said they were “devastated and traumatized” by the alleged damage to a 1,500-year-old heritage-listed stone arrangement that curved up the hill in the shape of an eel, and was a significant ceremonial and meeting site prior to European colonization of Australia. The Kuyang stone arrangement stretched across 176m of private farmland at Lake Bolac in southwestern Victoria, about 230km west of Melbourne. It is visible from the Glenelg Highway, and the tail end of the structure was reportedly damaged when the highway was created. On Sunday, a non-Indigenous local living in the Lake Bolac area reported that a section of the stone arrangement appeared to have been damaged by a grader.