Fullerton II 275

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        Fullerton II 275

        Fullerton II 275

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          Fullerton II 275

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            Fullerton II 275

              4 Images & Collections results for Fullerton II 275

              4 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              RARI LEE RSA FUE2 12
              LEE LEE-RARI-LEE-RSA-FUE2-12.jpg · Item
              Part of Lee, Neil
              Birds.

              Birds are commonly depicted in rock art. Some of the depictions of birds are shown swooping down on animals or standing next to dead antelope. In San mythology, flight is a wide spread metaphor for trance experience due to the sensations of rising up and floating that are part of some altered states of consciousness produced by the universal human nervous system.
              Fullerton II 275
              RARI LEE RSA FUE2 24
              LEE LEE-RARI-LEE-RSA-FUE2-24.jpg · Item
              Part of Lee, Neil
              Baboons.

              Baboons are painted and engraved more frequently than jackals, and they also feature more frequently in Bushman myth and folklore. The /Xam believed that, like the lion, the baboon had similar powers to those of shamans. It was supposed to draw these powers from a small stick of a plant, which it kept in its left cheek. Some depictions of baboons show a whole troop with males, females and babies. There are also therianthropic baboons which express the closeness of baboons to people and, more important, the association between baboons and shamans.
              Fullerton II 275