Featured in A Little Bit Country on September 19th, 2011.
Featured in VOLCANOES, Earths Geology & Atmosphere on August 8th, 2011.
Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park (Áísínai’pi) in Alberta, Canada is a landscape sacred to the Blackfoot people. The site is 32 km (20 mi) east of the town of Milk River. An archaeological preserve within the Park protects the largest concentration of rock art on the North American plains. The artists are thought to be the Blackfoot people who settled this area for at least 3,500 years. There is speculation some of the rock art may be up to 6,000 years old.
Covering the sheer sandstone cliffs of the area along the Milk River are petroglyph carvings, paintings and pictographs which include vivid depictions of hunting and spiritual vision quests. But by far the most common are scenes of warriors and battles. Some speculate these were meant as warnings to neighbouring enemies to stay away. Guided interpretive walks and tours are available from mid-May until Labour Day. Interpretive programs are scheduled regularly.
Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XSi
Focal length: 18 mm
Exposure: 1/250 at f/10
ISO 100
No post-processing
alyce taylor, writing on stone provincial park, Áísínai’pi, blackfoot, milk river, archaeological preserve, sandstone, petroglyph, carvings, aboriginal
Comments
August 8,2011

Thanx for the feature Ann :)
– Alyce Taylor
Congratulations! Your photo has been featured in “A Little Bit Country!”
This photo was chosen because it was of a very high quality and it captured exactly the sort of work that we feel should be displayed in the featured section of a country group.
Please keep up the great work and we hope you continue to add more of your excellent photographs to this group.
Thanx for the feature :)
– Alyce Taylor
This is awesome! It would be perfect for the Voucher Challenge in A Little Bit Country!