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  • One of the more unusual petroglyphs found along the Rinconada Canyon trail in Petroglyph National Monument suggests a mythical being with two feet and no arms.  Do the three "antennae" signify shamanic power of communication with spirits?
    shaman 0218.jpg
  • This petroglyph of a circle bisected by a straight line is a classic example of the "water glyph" identified by Bob Ford and Dixon Spendlove in their explorations of Anasazi petroglyphs in southern Utah, northern Arizona, and southeastern Nevada. Ford and Spendlove have discovered that such symbols point to and mark water sources.  Did this glyph from Petroglyphs National Monument convey the proximity of the river we know as Rio Grande?
    water glyph 0073.jpg
  • Macro view of a small snake figure carved on a large rock features fangs protruding from its round head at the left and "ring" lines crossing its tail tip at the right. Its body is drawn with angles of a lightning symbol, signifying the snake's power and speed.  The basalt boulders covering the hillside that Rinconada Canyon Trail traces would have offered prime habitat for rattlesnakes. Was this petroglyph created as a helpful warning to prehistoric Puebloan travelers?
    rattlesnake 0051.jpg
  • This glyph suggests a turkey: Was its carver advertising the presence of this game bird or communicating a clan affiliation?
    turkey 0086.jpg
  • This image shows a cluster of three glyphs.  The clearest is the turtle, centered; above the turtle is a bird, and below the bird (left of the turtle) is a dragonfly.
    turtle panel 0042.jpg
  • This detailed anthropomorph adopts a dance pose and wears a mask with design elements seen among Hopi kachina.
    kachina 0035.jpg
  • This distinct bear paw image could be a clan marker.  However, for some Puebloans, the bear paw is also a water symbol.
    bear paw 0082.jpg
  • This image's enclosed glyph features a central, stepped design with elements associated with the Aztec rain deity Tlaloc. Such similarities between Aztec and Puebloan symbols are believed to indicate cross-cultural communication and trade.  Cloud lines along the glyph's upper-left edge and lightning lines at its lower right may also imply its association with life-giving rain.
    rain glyph 0090.jpg
  • This image's zia glyph features the characteristic round, solar disk surrounded by radiating sets of parallel lines placed at the four cardinal directions (north, east, south, west).
    zia 0045.jpg
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CWP: Transforming Nature into Digital Art, by Jennifer Nelson

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