Scene to the right of the large bull's head: three archers, two with large horned headdresses, two with long bows. Unclear if the archer closest to the rock fracture is shooting at the middle figure or at an animal. Fine animals and wolves are done in the same style as the figures; the horses and most goats appear to be later. Two of the animals on the left are parcelled.
Two figures with raised and readied bows. The figure on the left wears a large hat, carries a daluur, and appears to have some kind of a protective jacket. The figure on the right is more schematic, as are the caprids on the right.
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.
Small standing figure with horned headdress, holding a knife of the type associated with the Karasuk Culture. Above the figure's head is a yoke-shaped mark, an element also associated with the Karasuk Culture but of uncertain meaning. Finely pecked on small, vertical surface.
Section of ""Large Panel,"" with stag with elaborate parcelling, small archer on left and dog and small figure (unfinished; unrelated?) on right. Scraped, discolored surface.
Archaic contoured image of an antlered elk with legs reduced to two tapered shapes. A pecked line of uncertain significance crosses the body of the animal. On a boulder in an area with many archaic images.
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.
Bedrock with two stylized stags (upper stag with unclear body, covered by lichen) and five frontal figures: dancing? Birthing? Ritual figures? See RA_PETR_OI_0004 for related composition, just below this one.
Images pecked on broken rock faces, including a Bronze Age hunter (upper left), a Bronze Age horse and bull (lower center) and a variety of other images.
Stone with variety of animals: deer, wild goats and sheep, bulls, and loaded bull (?) with large tail (?) in upper right. This boulder has been lost since the photograph was taken.
Sloping surface of outcrop. Two archers with recurved bows. One archer wears a three-horned headdress. Above are two fine, darkly patinated and almost invisible elk. Below is a cruder elk, apparently the animal being hunted.
Detail of rider on spiky maned horse, with dog. Larger spiky maned horse on the right may have been enhanced by scoring at a later period, and the horn of the goat on the left may have been repecked more recently. On high, scraped, and damaged surface.
Crude archer drawing long bow in direction of a large stag attacked by two dogs or wolves; second figure approaches from the right. On boulder surface.
Two hunters, one with a long bow, both with typical Bronze Age garb; several uncertain elements. On a dark, vertical east face of a boulder. Despite the apparent lightness of the pecking, the treatment of men and weapons indicates a date earlier than the Late Bronze Age.
Large section of bedrock, cracked and split, section on right revealing grey matrix. The scene on the left includes several hunters with bows and spears surrounding a large horse. Elk, argali, and ibex around the scene.
Wolf or feline with long tail chasing a large argali. Note the unfinished horn, the shifting patination from whitish to brown. Pecked, scraped bedrock.
Broken image stone with with right hand holding a cup and left hand placed on the hilt of a sabre. The figure's purse and the details of his jacket are clearly visible. This fine image is one of four image stones of varying quality and enclosures on the south bank of the lake.
Detail of image stone: large, round eyes; nose; long mustache; ears and earrings; right hand holding cup, left hand at belt; hilts of two weapons hanging from belt, purse over right hip.
Detail of three riders/hunters from the upper part of the panel, showing possibility of variation in the execution of images even when they may have been executed at the same time and by the same hand. Note the similarity between the three in terms of the postures of the riders and they manner in which they sit their horses.
Group of animals of which the three largest are probably by the same hand: stag on left, followed by dogs or wolves, two long-horned yak, one unfinished. On horizontal surface of outcrop.
Two ruined Turkic enclosures with two internal standing stones. An intact enclosure can be seen in the background with a false image stone on the east.
Detail of figure shooting long bow to his right. Figure wears a top-knot and carries either a quiver or a daluur. Signs of ancient, repatinated engraving below and to right of figure.l