Category: Rock Art

  • Nine Mile Canyon MMXXIV

    November 2, 2024

    It’s been more than two years since the last time I was in Nine Mile Canyon, and I recently saw a photo of a Barrier Canyon style pictograph that made me want to go back. That photo showed just enough background scenery that I found its location after spending maybe an hour in Google Earth searching. I had some other destinations in mind for this trip and I drove to the furthest one first so that when I finished up for the day I had a shorter drive home. On the way in I was pleased to see some yellow leaves still hanging on to many of the cottonwood trees. My first stop was at a petroglyph panel close to the road that I spotted with binoculars on my last trip here. It was still in the shadow of the canyon walls, and it wasn’t possible for me to get up close so I had to shoot handheld photos from a distance. The photos came out a little blurry, and I totally missed seeing some of the petroglyphs on the right side of the panel that were heavily weathered and not easily visible in the dim morning light.

    Yellow cottonwood tree
    Yellow cottonwood tree

    Yellow tree and the Mummy
    Yellow tree and the Mummy

    Petroglyph panel
    Petroglyph panel

    Bighorn sheep and archer
    Bighorn sheep and archer

    Big-headed figure
    Big-headed figure


    Next I went up Dry Canyon and scrambled up to a ruin that I found using Google Earth. I was cold when I started out but when I reached the ruin I’d worked up a sweat. The structure is partially collapsed, and it was probably a lookout for game or maybe other people, with good views up and down the canyon. On a ledge below the ruin was a small petroglyph panel.

    Steep, rocky hillside leading to a ruin
    Steep, rocky hillside leading to a ruin

    Dry Canyon ruin
    Dry Canyon ruin

    Dry Canyon ruin
    Dry Canyon ruin

    Dry Canyon trees
    Dry Canyon trees

    The Mummy above Dry Canyon
    The Mummy above Dry Canyon

    Petroglyphs below the ruin
    Petroglyphs below the ruin


    Back in Nine Mile I went for a steep hike to some white pictographs I’d also noticed on a previous trip. The climb up looked straightforward from below, but as I got close to the bottom cliff bands I had difficulty finding a way up. Going back and forth searching for weaknesses I found a couple of good petroglyphs, though. I made a couple of climbs that I knew would be difficult during the descent, but then it was an easy climb to the bottom of the upper cliffs. At the base of the cliffs I found a dead fawn in what seemed like an unlikely place to die. I wasn’t able to climb onto the ledge directly below the pictographs but I got some decent shots from just below it. On the way down those lower cliff bands proved to be easier to downclimb than I expected.

    Another steep, rocky climb ahead
    Another steep, rocky climb ahead

    Nine Mile Canyon Road
    Nine Mile Canyon Road

    MOAC (Montgomery Archaeological Consultants) marker
    MOAC (Montgomery Archaeological Consultants) marker

    Small horned figure and large centipede
    Small horned figure and large centipede

    Faint horned figure
    Faint horned figure

    Dead fawn in an unusual spot
    Dead fawn in an unusual spot

    White pictographs
    White pictographs

    Flavor Flav
    Flavor Flav

    View down the canyon
    View down the canyon


    While driving up the canyon some more I stopped to see a granary that I’d recently discovered the location of after seeing a drone video of it, only to realize that I’ve seen it at least a couple of times previously. I guess it looked different from the air than from the ground.

    See the granary?
    See the granary?

    Granary
    Granary


    My last stop of the day was the Barrier Canyon style pictograph that spurred me to go on this trip. I scanned the cliffs below through binoculars and saw some petroglyphs that I’d seen on a previous trip, but had never climbed up to. The pictograph doesn’t face the road so I could’t see it until I got up close. The best vantage point I could get was below the pictograph–if there was a ledge below the rock art when it was made, it must have fallen away since then. Seeing the pictograph was a nice way to cap off a fun and challenging day back in Nine Mile.

    Lots of dots
    Lots of dots

    Really unusual figures in this panel
    Really unusual figures in this panel

    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph
    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph

    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph
    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph

    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph (DStretch version)
    Faded Barrier Canyon style pictograph (DStretch version)

    Buttes above the canyon
    Buttes above the canyon


    Photo Gallery: Nine Mile Canyon MMXXIV