Unai Dangkulo Petroglyph Site Explained

Unai Dangkulo Petroglyph Site
Nearest City:Unai Dangkulo, Tinian, Northern Mariana Islands
Added:October 27, 1999
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:99001270

The Unai Dangkulo Petroglyph Site is one of a small number of documented rock art sites in the Mariana Islands. Located on the northeastern shore of the island of Tinian in the Northern Marianas, it is the only such site composed exclusively of pictographs (that is, carved or pecked figures rather than painted ones). It is also uncommon in that it is not found in a cave-like setting, which is where most of the other rock art sites in the region are found. The site is on a limestone outcrop that is sometimes covered by sand or cleared of sand by typhoons, and was discovered in 1998 after it was exposed by Typhoon Keith. It consists of about 50 figures, many of them anthropomorphic.[1]

The site was listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places in 1999.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Conversations with I Man-Aniti: Interpretation of Discoveries of the Rock Art in the Northern Mariana Islands. Cabrera. Genevieve. Tudela. Herman. Micronesian Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences. 5. 1-2. November 2006.