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  • Interpretations
    • A Horse-and-Rider Pictograph
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      • A Native American Bestiary
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Quick Facts
What is rock art?
Who made Arkansas rock art?
How are petroglyphs made?
How are pictographs made?
What is the difference between rock art and graffiti?
How old is Arkansas rock art?
Why did Native Americans make rock art?
What kinds of rock art images have been identified?
What are rock art styles?
What threatens to destroy rock art?
Where can I see rock art in Arkansas?
What can I do at a rock art site?

Interpretations
A Horse-and-Rider Pictograph
Fish-trap and Paddlefish
Portals Between the Worlds / Underwater Spirit
Footprints, Handprints, and Animal Tracks
The Hellgrammite Pictograph
The Human Body
The Narrows Rock Art Panel
Tools for Making Rock Art at The Narrows
Rock Art in Context: Art
Rock Art in Context: Physical Context
Rock Art in Context: Cultural Landscapes

Articles
The Arkansas Rock Art Project
What is Rock Art and What Can it Tell Us About the Past?
The Chronological and Cultural Context of Arkansas Rock Art
History of Rock Art Research in Arkansas
The Petit Jean Painted Rock Art Style

Technical Papers
Rock Art Documentation in Arkansas
The Narrows Rock Art in Archeological Context
Photogrammetry at The Narrows
Excavations at Rockhouse Cave
Archaeogeophysics at Rockhouse Cave
Actively Managing Rock Art Sites

Resources
Activities
A Native American Bestiary
Ancient Art Forms
Ancient Art Styles
Here Comes the Sun
Petroglyphs and Pictographs
Seeing the Ancient Peoples
Seeing the World Through Ancient Eyes
The Sky World, This World, and the Underworld
Using Databases
Lesson Plans
What is Rock Art Lesson
Ancient Animals
Art and Culture
Mysterious Symbols
Rock Art and Ritual
Seeing Ancient People Lesson
Seeing Ancient Worlds
Glossary
Bibliography
Site Recording Forms
Rock Art Links

Database
Search Database
Search Advanced Database

Just For Kids
Gayle's Quest
Raven's Dream
Jason and Tiffany's Excellent Adventure

Picture Gallery
Visit the Picture Gallery

Buy the Book!




Fish-trap and Paddlefish

By Deborah Sabo
Arkansas Archeological Survey

In rock art research a panel is the term for an area where more than one pictograph or petroglyph exist in close proximity. There may be two or hundreds of images in a panel. Some panels also have the character of a “scene,” in which two or more rock art images seem to relate to each other thematically, creating a little narrative. A very striking example of this is the fish trap and paddlefish panel on Petit Jean Mountain. These large red-painted pictographs are naturalistic, in the sense that they are easily recognizable, portraying their subject matter in lifelike form.

Paddlefish and trap pictograph
Paddlefish (above) and trap (below) pictograph.

Another name for the paddlefish (Polyodon spathula) is spoonbill catfish. These fish have no scales. They are distinguished by a long paddle-shaped snout and a bifurcated tail. In Arkansas the average paddlefish grows to about three feet long and weighs a bit less than 25 pounds. They like to move in shallow water and slow currents, where they feed by filtering tiny zooplankton across comb-like structures on their gills.

The paddlefish pictograph is life-sized, just about a yard long (104 cm) from snout to tail. It is entirely filled in with red paint and very accurately shows the fish’s shape as if you were standing on a riverbank looking down into the shallows, or perhaps from a canoe. You see the fish “top down,” so the strong dorsal fin on the fish’s back is not drawn on the pictograph; however, the smaller ventral and anal fins on the sides are drawn, and the bifurcated (double-lobed) tail is clearly drawn. Of course, the long spatula-like snout is the most dramatic feature.

Fishtrap drawing
Fishtrap drawing by Larry Porter.

Just below is the fish-trap pictograph. This one would perhaps have been a little harder to identify if it had been all by itself. But since it was painted so close to the fish image, its resemblance to examples of fish-traps known from many cultures was recognized. These traps are large and cone-shaped, made of twigs, reeds, or bark using loose-weave basketry techniques. The fish enters at the wider opening and cannot get out. This type of fish-trap was widely used along with a weir. Weirs are stone or wood constructions built across a stream as a barrier to guide the fish into the traps. We don’t have any prehistoric examples of fish-traps from sites in Arkansas, but we do have preserved remains of fishnets and many styles of weaving and basketry, showing that Indians from the Archaic period and later knew the techniques to make and use a fish-trap like this one. It’s also interesting to notice that because of the slow-moving waters preferred by paddlefish, traps set in weirs would be a good way to catch them.

Why did someone make these painted images? Archeologists are not sure if such expressions were meant to tell a story of something that happened (“we caught a big paddlefish today”) or something they hope will happen (“if we draw this event today it is more likely to happen tomorrow”). The paddlefish and fish-trap panel is at a site near the Petit Jean River and the Arkansas River. There are no fish bones at the site, but fish bones are very delicate and are rarely preserved. Other archeological evidence shows that fish were important to the Indian people living in the Central Arkansas River Valley, as a food source and as symbols in art.

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Last Updated: April 12, 2007 at 4:08:43 PM Central Time
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