which has a variety of geometrics, anthropomorphs, some deer, and you can even see one of the classic humpback flute players (Kokopelli) on the right side of the panel. The desert varnish has left a fine dark field for the artists to peck through and show the lighter sandstone beneath.
A detail of one section shows this fairly realistic deer
which incorporates aspects of the rock in defining the animal's stomach. He is emphatically male and his antlers are rendered more realistically than in most other prehistoric deer petroglyphs in the region.
Another favorite of mine from this panel is this horned frog
who has a nice symmetry, though the artist didn't think it necessary to do much on representing the head. Perhaps the wide, spiny body and squat legs were the essence of the horned frog for him.
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