decorative font style

Discover Banzhá’s Ancient Cave Art: A Window into Nomadic Life

Tecozautla is surrounded by places where samples of rock art have been found and, so far, 26 sites with this type of expression are known.

 

In Banzhá, 10 kilometers (6 miles) from Tecozautla, on the rocky slopes of Cerro La Mesa, there is an excellent sample of the rock art of the nomadic peoples who inhabited the area.

 

In a sheltered cavity, red and white lines were found with human figures, animals, and circles that can be interpreted as suns, as well as a snake with a thick, scaly body and its jaws open as if it wanted to devour some men.

 

Another admirable painting is that of the men with their hands raised representing a pilgrimage and also that of several men with sticks, spears, and shields practicing hunting.

 


Tourist Attraction
  • Horse Cave KOA – Year‑Round RV & Camping Resort Near Mammoth Cave

    Location:489 Flint Ridge Rd., Horse Cave, KY 42765Open year‑round, Horse Cave KOA delivers a full‑service RV and campground experience just 15 mi from the world’s longest cave, Mammoth Cave National Park. Our centrally located resort boasts free Wi‑Fi, spacious RV and tent sites, cozy cabins, hot showers, on‑site laundry, a refreshing swimming pool, shaded pull‑thrus, mini‑golf, a fenced dog park, fishing, a convenience store, and a playground with basketball and volleyball courts. We’re also ac

  • Explore Chiang Mai s Stunning Anxiety State Crisis Cave: A Premier Climbing Experience

    The Anxiety State Crisis Cave (Tham Wiung Fah) is a massive cavern, more than 70m deep, inside the limestone formation that makes up Crazy Horse Buttress. This is, without question, the most incredible climb I’ve ever done. Anxiety State Crisis takes a line up the featured pillar in the center of the cave. Alternatively, for those looking to go down, just left of the climb’s start is a hole leading even explorers even deeper. Check out www.thailandclimbing.co

  • Exploring Scotland s Deepest Cave: Uamh nan-Claiggion, the Cave of Skulls

    The depths of a Highland Winter may seem an ill-advised time to embark on exploring the submerged passages of Uamh nan-Claigg ionn, The Cave of Skulls, Scotland’s deepest cave.  But I had a lull in my diary and, besides, after dragging my kit down five vertical drops and numerous constricted crawls, I’d be convincingly ‘out of the wind’. Cave diving in the Scotland is like most of the UK, specialising in tight, serpentine crawls, long abseils and muddy water (or watery mud)… and the sites are