Message 793 of 877

Pictographs and Petroglyphs

According to Native American friends of mine, at least some of the
pictograph and petroglyph characters were creatures envisioned by
participants during sacred ceremonies which usually involved eating,
smoking, drinking or snorting hallucinogens. Many Native American
cultures of the past from North, Central and South America - as well as in
other parts of the world - used psychoactive substances and there are those
who use them today as well. Most often these are peyote, mushrooms
(psilocybin) or jimson weed though other substances are also used. I’ve
seen many pictographs (pictures painted on walls) and petroglyphs
(pictures chipped into rock) in the southwest since I moved to NM 36 yrs
ago and they include figures that look like space-suited aliens, spacecraft,
giraffes (an animal not known to ever have existed in the Americas),
people with square heads or crescent heads and fantastic flying creatures
that run the gamut from harpies (birds with human female heads) to
pterosaurs and just about everything in between. Art on cave or canyon
walls or rocks is not proof that dinosaurs existed any more than it proves
space aliens visited them, just that those who painted those figures were
on some righteously awesome trips to be able to visualize such things. I
reiterate the point that all the dinosaur bones found date to the age of the
dinosaurs. None of more recent vintage have ever been found. Even if our
present means of dating doesn’t yield perfectly accurate to-the-moment-
of-death results, the margin of error is off by a few thousand years at most,
not tens of millions of years. I am all for keeping an open mind and
exploring other ideas as long as they are plausible but I cannot in all
seriousness entertain the notion that dinosaurs survived the extinction
event then either hid out somewhere for 65 million years or continued to
reproduce in hiding for all that time only to reappear in Biblical or Mayan
times all without leaving any bones as tangible evidence.
RBC66's profile
Replies 11 - 20 of 27
Or maybe a very fat lizard???
RBC66's profile

about 1 year ago
Ribicon, was that photo at Picture Rock Pass on Hiway 31?
its been a long time but i have seen that.
will444doylee's profile

about 1 year ago
This is at a place called Petroglyph Lake at the Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge. I think Burns is the nearest town about a hundred miles to the north or maybe Plush about a hundred miles to the West. There were other petroglyphs there and some did look like spacemen (with a little imagination).
RubiconIII's profile

about 1 year ago
do you have any more pictures? we LOVE pictures haha......
Espirit's profile

about 1 year ago
Yes I have a few more at:
view link
RubiconIII's profile

about 1 year ago
thwanks Rubicon i finally found the location,i probably drove by this one a few times and didn't see that one .there is anouther one almost like that over by Abert Rim a few miles east of the Hart Mt.one.
will444doylee's profile

about 1 year ago
I love searching for rock art. My favorite so far..not counting mexico, is in El Passo, Tx. at heco tanks (sp?) The inside, after you climb to the top, is full of masks painted on the cave walls. The height is aboit 4 to 5 feet. I lied down and looked at two masks side by side and if i relaxed my eyes they both became one. I think it represented male and female. So very cool, even when it was way into the hundreds outside. This was a sacred place where they had ceramonies only. no household artifacts were found there. They painted masks of their Gods or they created them to wear during ceramonies. they then represented the "god", we think. I love News paper rock, so many things to see. I once thought the checkerboard look was a game they played while keeping watch.lol
The fun about rock art i think is the famliarity of rock art in many differnet places, like the horned serpant. So glad I found you all.
ayla1711's profile

about 1 year ago
I have seen newspaper rock.....and I love to look at what they presented. All the pictures had to mean something to them, inportant things in their lived at that time. Memories passed down and preserved in their art.
Espirit's profile

about 1 year ago
Where is the Newspaper Rock you are talking about? I visited one, Maybe a state park in a western state but can't remember where.
RubiconIII's profile

about 1 year ago
Gosh,
I think it was in El Passo, but i cannot remember just wear it was. It is well documented though. If u look up rock art news paper rock.
ayla1711's profile

about 1 year ago
Replies 11 - 20 of 27