Two goats on sloping surface of boulder. Both appear to have the same light patina and similar simple style, but the lower image is more competantly handled than is the upper image: one hand? Two different hands?
Two large walking birds, followed by a possible predator. Between the predator and birds, remains of a much older image, possibly an ibex. In front of the birds is visible a crude animal, weakly pecked.
Detail of three or four combatants with ""giant"" figure. Note Bronze Age daluur, head dresses; engraved recurve bow on upper right and scratched crosshatching below.
Arzhan-style deer with curious mineralization in area of chest around stone fracture. Its antlers are considerably lighter in tone: added later? Compare the variation in re-patination on this figure with the cruder, later goat on the left. Vertical surface.
Two small deer, one with over-scratching. Both with dark patina on richly mineralized and cracked surface. To the right is a small hunter which has been scratched and rubbed over an earlier element. On bedrock surface of ""Wild Bull Panel.""
Detail of small figure scratched and rubbed, possibly over a much earlier figure. Note dark, gouged upper section of long bow; trajectory of arrow gouged over an earlier animal; other elements, including a small deer (upper right) and possible lightly scratched recurve bow, upper left, over deeply incised marks. On upper section of ""Wild Bull Panel"" surface.
Crudely pecked deer with large antlers, followed by either a wolf or a feline. Other engraved elements including a large bow (below deer), and section of a large ibex, upper left. Upper section of surface with ""Wild Bull Panel.""
Large cow or bull attacked by a long-tailed animal (snow leopard?). Small figure beneath the bovid and possibly another animal attacking its nose. Upper section of jutting outcrop.
Detail of old bull's head and long horns. The animal's horns and head may have been repecked more recently or the mineral character of the surface has created a whitened patina. The contour of the yak's back has been scratched more recently. Technique.
Argali on red boulder executed in a style similar to that of another argali on an adjacent boulder. The latter, however, is more archaic in appearance.
Wolf attacking a large-horned ibex from back and neck. Variation in patination and comparison with much darker ibex on right suggests that this image has been refreshed since the Early Iron Age.