“When we went out there and looked at it, it hit my heart more than it did anything else,” said Raymond Andrews, the historic preservation officer of the Bishop Paiute tribe. “These are old and it’s part of our culture.”
The thieves did damage to six different petroglyphs, removing five and damaging one that was left behind. The carvings stood along cliffs of the Eastern Sierra Volcanic Tableland near the California-Nevada border, approximately 15 miles north of Bishop, Calif. They are what the local community calls “rock writings,” also referred to as rock art.
“They’re old writings that our local people here still go out to periodically to visit, either just to be around them or pray to them,” said Andrews.
Archaeologists describe the carving as an “engraving with color contrast,” created by removing the exterior coating of the rock that exposes lighter colored stoned underneath.
For archaeologists and members of the tribe, the carvings are much more than just physical representation of the past.
“It’s a very important spiritual and ceremonial artifact in history,” said Greg Haverstock, an archaeologist with Bishop field office of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). “It has a very religious value and it’s irreplaceable.”
Haverstock said the ancient petroglyphs were reported stolen on Oct. 31. Local authorities describe this crime as the worst act of vandalism they have seen in the 750,000 acres under their watch.
“This is a spot where thousands of visitors go to experience to make a connection with the past, so this is a really important location from a community perspective,” said Haverstock. “These people really made a selfish act and they basically have destroyed it.”