Category Archives: vandalism

Alister’s Cave Pictographs & Petroglyphs

Joshua Tree National Park is well-known for its rock formations and the climbing opportunities they offer. Some of the same fantastic formations that attract modern rock climbers also held meaning for Native Americans, and this conflict is clearly seen in places where rock climbers have damaged or destroyed pictographs.

Alister’s Cave is one area where climbing interests and cultural artifacts collide. Even though it is signposted by the National Park service, warning that it is closed to climbing due to the Federally protected pictographs, there is still evidence on the internet of climbers who disregard these signs, and the formation bears the talc patches from climber visits.

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“Scattered Surprises” Pictographs

These pictographs are a collection of fairly simple elements, found within maybe a half-mile or so of each other. There are larger, better defined habitation sites in the vicinity, some of which I have written about.

I collected these together in this entry since they share the common trait of being painted in the eroded hollows of large boulders.

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Red Rock Canyon Petroglyphs

This site is enormous – not in terms of surface area as much as in the sheer number of panels and petroglyphs it contains. Around 500 elements are spread across about 25 separate panels on this volcanic outcropping.

As is common with known sites, this one has suffered vandalism. Some designs are defaced, often by gunshots, and some panels have crude designs scratched on them. Fortunately, the majority of the site is still intact.

In the following overview, the path taken around the formation starts at the center of an east-facing alcove and proceeds widdershins (anti-clockwise). The photos follow in that same order.
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Ayers Rock Pictographs

The Ayers Rock pictographs, or Bob Rabbit pictographs, as they are also known after the Kawaiisu shaman purported to have created them, consists of three panels painted on different sides of an enormous monolith at the southern foot of a boulder-strewn hill.

The pictograph boulder, seen from the north. There is a single pictograph in the alcove on the right, and a panel in the center recess.

The pictograph boulder, seen from the north. There is a single pictograph in the alcove on the right, and a panel in the center recess.

Bob Rabbit was well-known as a “weather shaman”, or  ̉uupuhagadi – which may be more accurately translated as “weather manipulator”.

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Featured image for Chidago Canyon.

Chidago Canyon Petroglyphs

This famous site is one of the better known and oldest sites in the Volcanic Tablelands area. These petroglyphs are believed to date back at least 3,500 years, and some of them could date back around 8,000 years, when the area was first settled.

Today it is partially fenced to deter vandals, and this is unfortunately needed, given the vandalism the site has suffered over the years: shotgun damage as well as graffiti.

Fortunately, most of the petroglyphs survive intact and the site is still well worth a visit. Continue reading