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Images & Collections
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RARI RSA FLO5 9T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-9T.jpg · Item · 28/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 8T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-8T.jpg · Item · 25/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 7T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-7T.jpg · Item · 23/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 6T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-6T.jpg · Item · 27/09/1983
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 5T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-5T.jpg · Item · 20/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 4T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-4T.jpg · Item · 24/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 3T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-3T.jpg · Item · 28/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 3R
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-3R.jpg · Item
Part of RARI
Snakes.

Depictions of snakes are not uncommon in rock art.Often it is difficult to detect the head because the snake is entering or leaving a crack or step in the rock face. On close inspection, it is noticeable that most are not depictions of real snakes at all.
Moreover, bushman beliefs about snakes throw light on these puzzling features. It is believed that shamans used burnt snake powder to assist them in the control of their levels of trance. Like snakes, shamans go underground and then surface again when on out-of-body travel, and this probably explains why painted snakes often seem to slither in and out of the rock face.
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 2T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-2T.jpg · Item · 28/10/1993
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 2R
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-2R.jpg · Item
Part of RARI
Published in ' Images of Power' page 47. Bleeding from the nose. Female figures. Dance. Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 1T
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-1T.jpg · Item · 04/12/1987
Part of RARI
Kleine Fontein V 156
RARI RSA FLO5 1R
RARI RARI-RARI-RSA-FLO5-1R.jpg · Item · 01/01/1988
Part of RARI
Publisged in 'Images of Power' page 130-131. Snakes and bleeding from the nose.

Depictions of snakes are not uncommon in rock art.Often it is difficult to detect the head because the snake is entering or leaving a crack or step in the rock face. On close inspection, it is noticeable that most are not depictions of real snakes at all.
Moreover, bushman beliefs about snakes throw light on these puzzling features. It is believed that shamans used burnt snake powder to assist them in the control of their levels of trance. Like snakes, shamans go underground and then surface again when on out-of-body travel, and this probably explains why painted snakes often seem to slither in and out of the rock face.
Kleine Fontein V 156