Two archers with recurve bows and gorytus apparently shooting toward each other; nearby an aurochs or yak. Boulder within a draw in the eastern half of section.
Section of ""Large Panel"" with two stags and a snow leopard, all by different hands and from different periods. The upper stag is from the Pazyryk Period, the lower stag has characteristics of the Tashtyk style, and the snow leopard is Iron Age. Deeply scraped, discolored horizontal surface.
Detail of second rider on horse with long, full tail and head overlaid with leg of a later argali. Clear example of process of re-patination on argali. Scratch marks around images.
Surface high on eastern ridge of Shiveet Khairkhan with a variety of images: hunter, upper left, from the Bronze Age; two figures in combat, left (Bronze Age); large yak with load and goats (Late Bronze Age); stylized ibex with curled horn (Early Iron Age).
Deer or elk suckling her young and confronted by a predator (dog?). Crushed hardened rind has fallen out in several places, revealing the dark grey matrix.
Group of images in same pecking style, including a highly stylized deer, a caprid, and a man on horseback possibly pulling a cart? On low, broken boulder.
View of boulder (""Encyclopedia stone"") with images indicative of Early Iron Age traditions: camel with four riders, back-turned animals, stylized stags, back-turned rider in ""Parthian shot""; second rider; and (on other side of stone) archer on foot.
Rider in Early Nomadic costume, drawing bow. In his gorytus is held another bow. Rendition of rider and his horse is fine, that of the other animals is uncertain. Flat bedrock surface with deep scrape.
Balbal in the form of a deer stone, with five small animals (horses?) on east side, stylized deer with heads up, on north side; and stylized deer with heads down, on south side; circles (earrings) on upper north and south sides. The smaller stone on the left has been covered with modern writing. Located on east end of row of balbal.
Large deer stone with inverted images; smaller broken deer stone; from group of four (?) deer stones south of six sunken Early Nomadic burials with balbal and balbal-deerstone.