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ONLINE FEATURES
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December 30, 1998
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CAVE PAINTINGS
OF BAJA CALIFORNIA
COMPILED BY MARK ROSE
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Over-life-size animals on the wall of Cueva Pintada are typical
of the ancient paintings of the Sierra de San Francisco in central
Baja California. (Photograph by Harry W. Crosby, courtesy Sunbelt
Publications)
[LARGER IMAGE] |
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March and April 1962, archaeologist Clement Meighan accompanied an
expedition, funded by mystery writer Erle Stanley Gardner, the creator of
Perry Mason, to record "newly discovered" painted rock shelters in central
Baja California. The group visited four rock-shelters on foot and
photographed an additional five from a helicopter. Color photographs of
the paintings appeared in an article by Gardner in Life and in his
book, The Hidden Heart of Mexico, both of which were published that
year. In 1966, Meighan published a scholarly account of the paintings and
a small assemblage of artifacts collected at the sites in American
Antiquity.
Over the slit-like opening of a long shallow cave was a vast expanse
of fairly smooth rock surface. On that was painted a tumultuous cavalcade
of human and animal figures far greater than life size. All the beasts
seemed to press forward in movement from right to left; huge red and black
deer and equally immense red mountain sheep dominated the surge.
Publicized by Erle Stanley Gardner in 1962, Cueva de Pintada
has 500 feet of walls, most of which are painted. Figures in the
foreground, photographer Harry W. Crosby and Tacho Arce, provide scale
for the images on the rock-shelter's south panel. (Photograph by
Enrique Hambleton, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)
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Meighan's synopsis of his own article is a bit drier: "The shelters
contain an extensive series of elaborate paintings, and this report
summarizes the findings and attempts to place the paintings in a
chronological and cultural framework."
Today, more and more tourists are coming to Baja, many for whale
watching or sea kayaking, but also to see the painted rock-shelters, which
were added to UNESCO's list of
World
Heritage Sites in 1993. When Meighan visited the region the sites were
relatively unspoiled, "It is noteworthy that, with one exception (Palmarito),
the sites visited showed no vandalism, pothunting, or marking of the
paintings with initials." From 1994 to 1996, the
Getty Conservation Insitute and Mexico's National Institute of
Anthropology and History (INAH) studied one rock-shelter, El Raton, and
installed signs and walkways at some of the others. Study of El Raton is
being continued today by conservator Valerie Magar, of the Dirección de
Restauración in Mexico City.
INAH,
meanwhile, has established regulations for visiting the sites.
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Images of wildlife are the most
common paintings on Baja rock-shelters. Land animals depicted include
rabbits, mountain sheep, and deer, such as these from El Parral XIV.
(Photograph by Enrique Hambleton, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)[LARGER IMAGE]
Sea creatures such as manta rays, from Cuesta de San Pablo II, as
well as marine mammals, fish, and shorebirds were also painted.
(Photograph by Harry W. Crosby, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)[LARGER IMAGE] |
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The painted rock-shelters were known to Spanish missionaries; those
recorded by Meighan are between San Ignacio mission, founded in 1728, and
Mission Santa Gertrudis, founded to north in 1751. Francisco Javier
Clavigero, in his 1789 Historia de la Antigua o Baja California,was
the first to describe the painted rock-shelters, noting pictures of
men and women, and the different species of animals. These
paintings, although crude, show the objects distinctly. The colors that
served for them are clearly seen to have been made from the mineral earths
which are found in the region of the volcano of Las Virgenes. The
missionaries most admired the fact that those colors should have remained
permanent in the stone through many centuries wirthout being damaged by
either air or water. Not feeling those pictures and dress to belong to the
savage and brutalized nations which inhabited California when the Spanish
arrived there, they doubtless belong to another ancient nation, although
we cannot say which it was. The Californians unanimously affirm that it
was a nation of giants who came from the north.
Although the California Indians have been asked the meanings of the
paintings, rays, and characters they could not attain any satisfactory
reason. The most that has been found out is that [the paintings] are of
their ancestors and that those of today are completely ignorant of the
meaning. (trans. by C. Meighan in American Antiquity)
As Meighan observed, the comments of the missionaries to which
Clavigero refers must predate 1768, the year the Jesuits were expelled
when Spanish lands were closed to the order.
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A 40-foot-long painted area at Cueva del Ratón includes a human
figure with a black face patch, deer, and a mountain lion. (Photograph
by Enrique Hambleton, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)
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French explorer Leon Diguet mentioned eight painted sites in his
articles about Baja in L'Anthropologie (1895) and Nouvelles
Archives des Missions Scientifiques (1899), but only one, San Borjita,
whose 70 figures were described in the 1950s by Dahlgren and Romero and by
Dahlgren de Jordan, had really been studied before Meighan's report. The
four rock-shelters seen by Meighan on foot are Flechas Cave (so-named by
Meighan for a group of three human figures with arrows painted across
their bodies), Palmarito (near the village of San Francisco), Pajaro Negro
(named by Meighan for black paintings of birds, though its local name is
Cueva de la Soledad), and Gardner (named after the expedition's sponsor,
but alreday known as Cueva Pintada). Of these, only Palmarito was also
seen by Diguet.
Only four human figures with black face patches are known. This
one, from El Cajón del Valle, has exceptionally well preserved colors.
(Photograph by Harry W. Crosby, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)
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In these four rock-shelters Meighan recorded a total of 250
figures--humans, deer, mountain sheep, rabbits, birds, and fish--most life
size or larger. The basic colors used included black (charcoal), white (a
solidified volcanic ash), brick red (crushed lava), and orange red
(ocher), with yellow (ocher?) considerably less frequent. Unlike the other
colors, which required a binder, the white could be applied directly to
the rock-shelter walls. The paintings were begun by outlining the figure,
usually in white but sometimes in black, after which it was filled in with
red, black, or both. Human figures could be split vertically, one side
being painted red, the other black. Deer and mountain sheep could be
divided horizontally into red and black halves.
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Animals with arrows are common, but human figures with arrows
like these at Las Flechas are rare at sites in the Sierra de San
Francisco. Elsewhere, in the sierras of Guadalupe and San Borja, both
are common. (Photograph by Harry W. Crosby, courtesy Sunbelt
Publications)
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Many of the animal figures had an arrow depicted either across them
or stuck in them (generally in the back). The arrows were often done in
white, at the same time the figure was outlined. Some 25% of the animals
Meighan saw had such arrows. But the white color, applied directly to the
stone, was susceptible to weathering and obliteration by overpainting so
that in many cases such arrows have not survived. In fact, Meighan
suggested, most originally had arrows. In the case of human figures with
arrows, which are far fewer, there are as many as ten arrows on a single
figure.
Animals were depicted life size or over, but human figures could be
few inches to more than ten feet. The bodies of animals were shown in
profile, with the heads in three-quarter or front view to accentuate horns
of mountain sheep, antler of deer, and ears of rabbits. Humans are shown
frontally, but lack facial features or distinguishing sexual
characteristics. The style, Meighan concluded, was essentially static,
with action implied but not indicated, e.g. arrows are shown stuck in
animals but there is no depiction of a hunter shooting an arrow.
Consistency of this style indicates that the paintings were executed over
a relatively short period, which Meighan estimated to have been a few
generations to at most two centuries. He did note some evidence of change
in the paintings over this time. The few birds, depicted with outspread
wings, seem to postdate most of the other paintings, and the smaller human
figures also appear to be late, since the are seldom overpainted. This,
Meighan suggested, may indicate some sort of "decline" or "cultural
disruption."
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Two deer-headed serpents give Cueva
de la Serpiente its name. The right-hand one is complete, with
deer-like ears and antlers, long banded body, bifurcated tail. Only
the head of the left one is preserved; the body was painted on a
section of rock that fell away. The 26-foot-long mural also has more
than 50 doll-like human and animal figures. (Photograph by Harry W.
Crosby, courtesy Sunbelt Publications)[LARGER IMAGE
(left)] [LARGER IMAGE (right)] |
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As with most rock art, the meaning of the Baja paintings remains
obscure, though some of Meighan's observations may be on the right track.
The animals, for example, he said are not simply creatures depicted in
nature but have been struck by a hunter's arrow, and this implies a
"cultural meaning associated with hunting magic." Less clear is his
preference for "witchcraft or black magic" rather than warfare as an
explanation of the multiple arrows in human figures. Significantly,
Meighan calculated that human figures are painted overtop animals at least
three times more frequently than would be expected by chance. He
interpreted this as an expression of human dominance. Placement of some of
the paintings is curious. While most were on easily accessible walss and
ceilings, some would have required a ladder or scaffolding, and others
were executed in dangerous locations, e.g. on projecting roof over drop of
several hundred feet. Such locations indicated to Meighan that the act of
painting was more important than the painting itself.
Although none of the rock-shelters had deep deposits, Meighan
collected a small assemblage (139 catalog entries, almost all from Cueva
Pintada) from crevices where debris had accumulated, including flaked
slate and basalt choppers and scrapers, obsidian projectile points, and
sandstone manos and metates; bone awls and deer scapula "saws"; wood fire
drill components, arrow foreshafts, pegs or stakes, a hook for harvesting
cactus fruits, cut segemnts of cane and palm, and viznaga spines; basketry
and net fragments, yucca fiber quids, cordage of yucca fiber, and a palm
frond braid; marine shells and fragments; and an iron knife blade (a relic
of a later visit to the site). Bedrock mortars were ground into the
rock-shelter floors, and there were abundant chipping debris and coarse
stone tools on the slope at their mouths. No artifacts that would indicate
how the paintings were made, such as brushes, were recovered. Meighan
found that the artifacts from Cueva Pintada were similar to those from a
rock-shelter at Bahia de Los Angeles, to the north, which belongs to the
archaeological complex (a set of distinctive artifacts and other cultural
features) known as Comondú. The Comondú painters were probably the
ancestors of the historic Cochimí inhabitants of the area whose language
is called Peninsular Yuman. A wooden peg from a crevice in Cueva Pintada
yielded a date of 530 ± 80 years, or sometime between A.D.
1352 and 1512. This date, says Meighan, agrees both with Clavigero's
report of 1760s observation that Indians said the paintings were by an
earlier people and with the late prehistoric and historic Comondú
assemblage.
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If the identification of this image
from El Parral XIV as a depiction of the pre-dawn supernova of July
1054, supernova birth of the Crab Nebula is correct, it would provide
a valuable date for the age of the Baja paintings. The supernova was
recorded in China. Possible parallels for El Parral occur at White
Mesa, Arizona; Navaho Canyon, Arizona; and Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
(left to right in illustration). (Photograph by Enrique Hambleton,
courtesy Sunbelt Publications)[LARGER IMAGE
(left)] [LARGER IMAGE (right)] |
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Stitching the slim evidence available to him into a narrative,
Meighan devised the following tale: several hundred years ago, Peninsular
Yumans in Baja were successful hunter-gatherers, subsisting on fish and
shellfish, pitahaya cactus, rabbit, deer, and mountain sheep. As time
passed, life became more difficult through the general desiccation of the
Desert West, overhunting, or some other reason. Whatever prompted it,
beginning perhaps 600 years ago, efforts to improve the supply of game
supply were made through hunting magic involving the paintings. They
failed, and the rock-shelters and painting were abandoned 200 years before
the arrival of the Spanish. By time of the Jesuit missionaries, the
population was probably smaller and the culture poorer than it had been
for centuries. Meighan, offered an intriguing alternative cause for this
decline--epidemic diseases--though he said it was "a wholly unprovable
speculation." The first Spanish in Baja were Ulloa in 1539, Cabrillo in
1542, and Vizcaino in 1602. Though the area was not missionized until
1700s, diseases may have outpaced the permanent Spanish settlement.
For now, the origins, purpose, and demise of Baja's magnificent
paintings remain unknown.
MARK ROSE is managing
editor of ARCHAEOLOGY.
FURTHER READING
Clavijero, Francisco Javier, Historia de la Antigua o Baja
California. Juan Navarro, Mexico: 1789
Crosby, H.W., The Cave Paintings of Baja California: Discovering the
Great Murals of an Unknown People. San Diego: Sunbelt Publications,
1997. ISBN 0-932653-23-5
Dahlgren, B. and J. Romero, "La Prehistoria Bajacaliforniana,"
Cuadernos Americanos 58 (1951), pp. 153-78
Dahlgren de Jordan, B., "Las Pintures Rupestres de la Baja California,"
Artes de Mexico (March-April, 1954), pp. 22-8
Diguet, L., "Note sur la pictographie de la Basse-Californie,"
L'Anthropologie 6 (1895), pp. 160-75; "Rapport sur une mission
scientifique dans la Basse-Californie," pp. 1-53 in Nouvelles Archives
des Missions Scientifiques 9, Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1899
Gardner, E.S., "A Legendary Treasure Left by a Long Lost Tribe,"
Life 53:3 (1962), pp. 57-64; The Hidden Heart of Mexico, Wm.
Morrow & Co., New York, 1962
Gutiérrez, M. L., E. Hambleton, J. Hyland, and Stanley Price, N.P, "The
management of World Heritage sites in remote areas: the Sierra de San
Francisco, Baja California, Mexico," Conservation and Management of
Archaeological Sites 1:4 (1996), pp. 209-225
Meighan, C., "Prehistoric Rock Paintings in Baja California,"
American Antiquity 31:3 (1966), pp. 372-392
Stanley Price, N.P, "The Great Murals: Conserving the Rock Art of Baja
California," Conservation (The GCI Newsletter) 11:2
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