Follow up video to my pictograph series yesterday.



by senseiofsensi

28 Comments

  1. Looks old. Wouldn’t tell just anyone where it is, some people might want to deface it or break it down. Get better quality video of it for records keeping. Tell some official agency about it, maybe they can further surgery the area for more of those paintings in the areA. Nice find if truly old

  2. Saw your post yesterday. Didn’t know we had these in VA, very cool. Unfortunately probably not as old as we’d like to believe lol

  3. This looks like a good possibility that it’s a red ochre people site. They were more typical of the great lakes region but people traveled across the whole continent to trade and marry and make war.

  4. Would be MORE strange if you allowed scientists to study it and determine if it is ancient or just a painting a drunk cousin did recently.

    Also, ancient pictographs that remain today, are in dry locations or where the painting is protected from the elements; particularly rain. In the video we can see the pictograph is exposed to the elements, in a forest area (gets rain). Which leads me to think this isn’t at all ancient, much less genuine.

  5. “what im trying to share and question together”

    Sir you just recorded a silent selfie next to **Utah’s pictographs,** ancient rock paintings created by Indigenous peoples.

    Its infuriating how close you felt the need to get. These are unprotected because the state of Utah couldn’t give a fuck about the Ute tribe and anything that might contradict official Mormon church history.

    I hope you didn’t touch it too. They are constantly being desecrated and destroyed by people being careless.