pictograph

 PIK-toh-graf

 An image painted onto a rock surface, usually with pigments made from mineral oxides, charcoal, or plant materials mixed with animal fat or water. Pictographs are more fragile than petroglyphs — exposed to weather, they fade and flake over centuries. The ones that survive are often found in sheltered alcoves and overhangs, protected by the rock itself.
Etymology
 From Latin pictus (painted) + Greek graphē (writing, drawing). A painted image.
geology human settlement Indigenous
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