Glyph Dweller
Archaeologist Alanah Woody's infectious enthusiasm for Nevada's rock art knows no bounds
- By Christopher Hall
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
On a warm, overcast Saturday, I tag along as Woody leads a tour to a petroglyph site about a 75-minute drive from Carson City. The site, Grimes Point, consists of hundreds of basalt boulders scattered around a slope that was once the beach of a late ice age lake. "Imagine a family group hanging out next to the lake," she says. "Maybe a few times a year they get together with other groups to make these images."
At first we strain to pick out anything from surrounding rock of a similarly dark color. But soon our eyes adjust, and we see hundreds of the man-made pockmarks known as cupules on the tops and sides of boulders, and abstract line drawings of every conceivable shape—spirals, grids, zigzags, squiggles, circles, crescents.
"Rock art is the perfect hook to get people thinking about whether and how we're all so different," Woody tells me on the drive back to Carson City. "Only humans do art, and people respond to rock art in emotional ways. It connects you directly with those who came before, and you realize you have something in common with folks who lived here 10,000 years ago. In that way it can broaden how we think about others. That's the power of this art, and that's why we need to protect it."
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments