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Toquima Cave (exterior)
Nevada

Toquima Cave is located near Pete's Summit south east of Austin, Nevada.  It sits in a rock face w/ a perfect view to the east & shelter from the blazing sun, visible from the main forest service road.  Inside it features many colorful pictographs on both sides of the wall & a charcoaled ceiling from fire.  From the Travel Nevada website:

 

The captivating Toquima Cave is not far from the geographic center of Nevada, just south of the notorious Loneliest Road in America. Burrowed in the Toquima Range in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest, this extraordinarily historic site holds massive cultural importance to American Indians, particularly the Western Shoshone who once densely populated the area thousands of years ago. 

This intensely sacred rock shelter was utilized by American Indians as a temporary dwelling between 3,000 and 1,500 years ago. Very few artifacts were uncovered from the cave, as it was only occupied for a short period of time. While relics from this prehistoric period are few and far between, the Natives left quite the enigmatic footprint inside the cave: a large number of pictographs on the north and south walls. Pictographs, not to be confused with petroglyphs, are images drawn or painted on a rock face. Petroglyphs on the other hand, are created by carving or engraving images onto a rock surface.

The easily identifiable pictographs were painted in white, red, yellow and black pigments and seemingly applied by finger painting. Over 300 independent motifs can be spotted, and although determined to be non-representational, the images are quite fascinating, nonetheless. According to experts, these Natives illustrated abstract paintings, incorporating long rows of tick-marks while also heavily implementing circular and triangular shapes. While this is the official determination of this significant archeological site, to an uninformed visitor, the shapes start to take on recognizable forms, like deer or buffalo. 

As one of many pictograph sites in Nevada, Toquima Cave and the surrounding 40 acres were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. When arriving at the site, enter the Toquima Cave Campground and hike the short 1/2 mile up to the entrance of the Cave. To protect this tremendous history, the cave is fenced off in order to keep visitors at a respectful distance, and access in the actual interior is very limited. Native peoples consider this an important sacred site and continue to hold modern day ceremonial activities at Toquima Cave.

 

Source: https://travelnevada.com/caves/toquima-cave/

Copyright: William L
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 13200x6600
Taken: 31/05/2021
Uploaded: 17/07/2021
Published: 17/07/2021
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Tags: toquima cave; national register of historic places; nevada; gated; cleft; shelter; pictographs; native american; indian; ancient; petes summit; potts cave; western shoshone; range; toiyabe national forest; art; archeology; great basin
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