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Little Black Mountain Petroglyph Site is accessed by a dirt road. The site has
over 500 individual rockart designs or elements on the cliffs and boulders at the base of
a 500 foot mesa. The different designs are associated with the cultures of the Great
Basin, Western Anasazi and Lower Colorado River, a suggestion of the many cultures that
have been this way. Some of the representations of turtles, lizards, and bear paws may be
symbols with social or religious meanings now lost in time.
About the Site
Geology - The lower slopes at Little Black Mountain are part of the Moenkopi
Formation and are highly erodible. The higher up rocky ledges are of the Shinarump Member
of the Chinle Formation. Large blocks of this sandstone layer have broken off and tumbled
down slope. People of several cultures carved petroglyphs on these fallen boulders.
Soils - Mother Nature is taking a slow toll through erosion, exfoliation, and
the growth of lichens. Touching and climbing on the boulders, or walking on the
cryptogamic soils ( A very delicate crust of fungus and lichens on the soil surface) will
speed up the destruction of this site.
Plants - Creosote is the most prominent of the desert shrub species found here.
Others include fourwing saltbush, burro brush, wolfberry, range ratany, Indigo bush,
apache plume and mormon tea. April and May are the best months to see the desert plants in
bloom.
Wildlife - Several varieties of birds, large and small, make the Little Black
Mountain area their home. Rabbits, ground squirrels, three species of rattlesnakes,
lizards and scorpions live here. Black widow and brown recluse spiders - both poisonous-
are also present in the area.
Please encourage your children to stay on the trails. They follow your example.
Remember - This site is yours to share and appreciate, but once it's gone, it's gone
forever.
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