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.
Three layers of imagery: Bronze Age figure with large headdress; three crude riders from the Iron Age; and more recent, crude frontal figure. On vertical surface of outcrop.
Boulder with a woman leading a loaded yak in the upper right, many other animals. The yak, the woman, and the yak in the upper left appear to be by the same hand, most of the other animals by a later hand. Note the curious elements carried by the yak, similar to other scenes from BO I and V.
Large hunting scene with small archer, a woman standing above and to the left (?), many animals including some finely pecked goats, below. On boulder with scraped, cracked surface.
Boulder with several crude figures, scenes of hunting, and two carts, both with solid wheels. One cart has a driver with no apparent reins, the other has no driver.
Three images, possibly all by different hands: tall figure with long staff, daluur, quiver (Bronze Age); crude goat Iron Age); boar done in an elaborate parcelled style (Arzhan or Pazyryk style).
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 boulder with many images. Note double caprids in center, plantigrade caprid above, elegant hunter and stag. Different patina of images does not necessarily indicate different dates, but the differences in style (of images and pecking) probably do indicate different hands/periods. In this case, the lower double caprid seems to be a copy of the upper one, done at a much later time.
Herd of goats on two different sections of split boulder. Those above are probably earlier than the small group below. Note the treatment of some of the animals as if seen in a three-quarter pose. The vertical surface may delay the repatination of the images; thus the upper group may belong to the Early Nomadic Period.