
Antelope.
At V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.

Antelope.
At V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.
Antelope.
At V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.

Anthropomorphic figure, at V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.
Anthropomorphic figure, at V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.

Deer figure, with lichen growing in the stippling.
At V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.
Deer figure, with lichen growing in the stippling.
At V-Bar-V Ranch Heritage Site, Coconino National Forest, Arizona.
Petroglyphs at Keyhole Sink, in the Kaibab National Forest, Arizona.
The top photo shows a rock panel that has been subject to recent vandalism. In 2010, and again last year, someone hiked in with paint and brushes to tag the glyphs: Ace, T.J., Parker. Conservators have been able to successfully remove the graffiti, but the rock varnish is somewhat dulled by the process.
The illustration at bottom, adapted from signage at the Keyhole site, shows a petroglyph panel that I observed, but was unable to photograph. The Sinaguan people who lived and hunted here recorded how the sink was used as a corral for game. Deer and elk were driven into the confining space formed by the high walls of the keyhole-shaped canyon.
The sink also served as a reliable water source for people and animals. During snow melt and during monsoon season water cascades over the eastern wall of the canyon, and pools form below. There was no standing water in the sink today, but plenty of evidence of recent pooling, and hundreds of jumbled animal tracks in the damp canyon floor.
Petroglyphs at Keyhole Sink, in the Kaibab National Forest, Arizona.
The top photo shows a rock panel that has been subject to recent vandalism. In 2010, and again last year, someone hiked in with paint and brushes to tag the glyphs: Ace, T.J., Parker. Conservators have been able to successfully remove the graffiti, but the rock varnish is somewhat dulled by the process.
The illustration at bottom, adapted from signage at the Keyhole site, shows a petroglyph panel that I observed, but was unable to photograph. The Sinaguan people who lived and hunted here recorded how the sink was used as a corral for game. Deer and elk were driven into the confining space formed by the high walls of the keyhole-shaped canyon.
The sink also served as a reliable water source for people and animals. During snow melt and during monsoon season water cascades over the eastern wall of the canyon, and pools form below. There was no standing water in the sink today, but plenty of evidence of recent pooling, and hundreds of jumbled animal tracks in the damp canyon floor.

Petroglyph, cottonwood.
At Capitol Reef National Park, Utah.
Petroglyph, cottonwood.
At Capitol Reef National Park, Utah.