Painted Rock is an archaeological and sacred site of the Yokuts of the Tule River Indian Tribe of the Tule River Reservation in Tulare County, California .[ 1] [ 2] Painted Rock contains petroglyphs visited and described by Walter James Hoffman in 1882[ 3] and by Clinton Hart Merriam in 1903.[ 4] One image on the panel has been interpreted by cryptozoologists as "an entire Bigfoot family".[ 5]
Sources
References
^ "Painted Rock Campground" . Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey , United States Department of the Interior .
^ Strain 2012 p. 1
^ Powell, J. W., ed. (1893). Tenth Annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1888–'89 . Washington, DC: G.P.O. pp. 52– 57, 637– 639.
^ Merriam, C. Hart (December 1967). Heizer, Robert F. (ed.). Ethnographic Notes on California Indian Tribes: Ethnological Notes on Central California Indian Tribes (PDF) . Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey. Vol. 68, part III. University of California, Berkeley. pp. 412– 413.
^ Strain 2012 p. 2
External links
Latta, Frank F. (2011) [1936]. California Indian Folklore, as Told to F.F. Latta by Wah-nom-kot, Wah-hum-chah, Lee-mee (and others) . Shafter: Shafter Press. ISBN 9781258114626 .
Latta, Frank F. (1977). Handbook of Yokuts Indians (2nd ed.). Santa Cruz, Cal.: Bear State Books.
People
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