Yes, you're right about the rest of it -- most of the heavier elements have to be produced in a lab. I think some elements heavier than Uranium do occur, or can be produced, naturally in small amounts, mostly plutonium. I think the threshold for "possibly natural" to "almost certainly artificial" is at element number 100, fermium.
The important threshold numbers are:
43 -- Technetium, lightest element that is never stable.
82 -- Lead, heaviest element that has a stable form.
94 -- Plutonium, heaviest element that is still observed naturally.
100 -- fermium, heaviest element that existed naturally, but then it was only created in "freak" circumstances where enough uranium was concentrated in one place, to create a "natural nuclear reactor" (in Gabon).
Above fermium, every element decays so quickly that it's essentially useless apart from to scientists, with half-lives measured in hours or even fractions of a second.