For the earth, he drew a straight line,
For the sky a bow above it;
White the space between for day-time,
Filled with little stars for night-time;
On the left a point for sunrise,
On the right a point for sunset,
On the top a point for noontide,
And for rain and cloudy weather
Waving lines descending from it.
— From The Song of Hiawatha by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
When European explorers arrived in America, Native Americans did not communicate as we know it through writing. Instead, they told stories (oral histories) and created pictures and symbols. This type of communication is not unique to Native Americans, as long before writing was developed, people recorded events, ideas, plans, maps, and feelings worldwide by drawing pictures and symbols on rocks, hides, and other surfaces.
Historic pictorial symbols for a word or a phrase have been found dating before 3000 BC. These symbols, called pictographs, are created by painting on rock surfaces with natural pigments. These natural pigments included iron oxides in hematite or limonite, white or yellow clays, soft rock, charcoal, and copper minerals. These natural pigments were mixed to produce a palette of yellow, white, red, green, black, and blue. Historic pictographs are usually found under protective ledges or in caves protected from the weather.
Another similar form of communication, called petroglyphs, was carved, pecked, or abraded into stone surfaces. This carving could produce a visible indentation in the rock or cut deeply enough to reveal unweathered material of a different color below.
Native American symbols were like words and often had one or more definitions and contained different connotations. Varying from tribe to tribe, it can sometimes be challenging to know their meanings, while other symbols are obvious. With the multiple languages spoken by Native American tribes, symbols or “picture writing” was often used to convey words and ideas. Symbols were also used to decorate homes, were painted on buffalo hides, and recorded important events of the tribe.
These images are a valuable record of cultural expression and hold profound spiritual significance for contemporary Native Americans and the descendants of the early Spanish settlers.
The arrival of Spanish people to the Southwest in 1540 dramatically impacted the lifestyle of the Pueblo people. In 1680, the Pueblo tribes rose in the revolt against Spanish rule and drove the settlers out of the area and back to El Paso, Texas. In 1692, the Spanish resettled in the Albuquerque, New Mexico, area. As a result of their return, there was a renewed influence of the Catholic religion, which discouraged participation by the Puebloans in many of their traditional ceremonial practices. Consequently, many of these practices went underground, and much of the image-making by the Puebloans decreased.
There were many reasons for creating the Petroglyphs, most of which modern society does not understand well. Petroglyphs are more than just “rock art,” picture writing, or an imitation of the natural world. They should not be confused with hieroglyphics, symbols used to represent words, nor thought of as ancient Indian graffiti. Petroglyphs are powerful cultural symbols that reflect the complex societies and religions of the surrounding tribes.

Petroglyphs in the Petrified Forest of Arizona by the National Park Service.
The context of each image is extremely important and integral to its meaning. Today’s natives have stated that placing each petroglyph image was not a casual or random decision. Some petroglyphs have meanings only known to the individuals who made them. Others represent tribal, clan, kiva, or societal markers. Some are religious entities; others show who came to the area and where they went. Petroglyphs still have contemporary meaning, while the meaning of others is no longer known, and they are respected for belonging to “those who came before.”
The United States has thousands of pictographs and petroglyphs, with the greatest concentration in the American Southwest. The site with the most of these is the Petroglyph National Monument in New Mexico. At the monument, archaeologists have estimated there may be over 25,000 petroglyph images along the 17 miles of the escarpment. A small percentage of the petroglyphs within the park pre-date the Puebloan period, perhaps reaching as far back as 2000 B.C. Other images date from historic periods starting in the 1700s, with petroglyphs carved by early Spanish settlers. It is estimated that 90% of the monument’s petroglyphs were created by the ancestors of today’s Pueblo people. Puebloans have lived in the Rio Grande Valley since before 500 A.D., but a population increase around 1300 A.D. resulted in numerous new settlements. Most petroglyphs were believed to be carved from about 1300 through the late 1680s.
Arrow | ![]() |
Protection |
Arrowhead | ![]() |
Alertness |
Badger Track | ![]() |
Summer |
Bear | ![]() |
Strength |
Bear Paw | ![]() |
Good Omen |
Big Mountain | ![]() |
Great abundance |
Bird | ![]() |
Free of worry, Carefree |
Broken Arrow | ![]() |
Peace |
Broken Cross Circle | ![]() |
Four Seasons, That Which Revolves |
Brothers | ![]() |
Unity, Equality, Loyalty |
Buffalo Horns | ![]() |
Success |
Buffalo Skull | ![]() |
Sacredness, Reverence for Life |
Butterfly | ![]() |
Everlasting life |
Cactus | ![]() |
Sign of desert |
Coyote & Coyote Tracks | ![]() |
Trickster |
Crossed Arrows | ![]() |
Friendship |
Days-Nights | ![]() |
Time Passing |
Deer Track | ![]() |
Game plentiful |
Drawn Bow & Arrow | ![]() |
Hunting |
Drying Rack | ![]() |
Plenty of Meat |
Eagle | ![]() |
Freedom |
Eagle Feather | ![]() |
Chief |
Enclosure | ![]() |
Ceremonial Dances |
End of Trail | ![]() |
Peace, End of War |
Evil Eye | ![]() |
This symbol protects from the curse of the Evil Eye. |
Facing Arrows | ![]() |
Warding off evil spirits |
Four Ages | ![]() |
Infancy, Youth, Middle, Old Age |
Gecko | ![]() |
Sign of Desert |
Gila Monster | ![]() |
Dream Time |
Great Spirit | ![]() |
The Great Spirit is a conception of universal spiritual force, or supreme being prevalent among most Native American tribes. |
Head Dress | ![]() |
Ceremonial |
Hogan | ![]() |
Permanent Home |
Horse | ![]() |
Journey |
Kokopelli | ![]() |
Flute Player, Fertility |
Lightning | ![]() |
Power, Speed |
Lightning Arrow | ![]() |
Swiftness |
Man | ![]() |
Life |
Medicine Man’s Eye | ![]() |
Wisdom |
Morning Stars | ![]() |
Guidance |
Mountain Range | ![]() |
Destination |
Path | ![]() |
Crossed |
Peace Pipe | ![]() |
Ceremonial, sacred |
Rain | ![]() |
Plentiful crop |
Rain Clouds | ![]() |
Good Prospect |
Rattle Snake Jaws | ![]() |
Strength |
Saddle Bag | ![]() |
Journey |
Skyband | ![]() |
Leading to Happiness |
Snake | ![]() |
Defiance |
Squash Blossom | ![]() |
Fertility |
Sun | ![]() |
Happiness |
Sun Flower | ![]() |
Fertility |
Sun God Mask | ![]() |
The Sun God is a powerful spirit among a number of Native American tribes. |
Sunrays | ![]() |
Constant |
Swastika | ![]() |
Four corners of the world, Well-Being |
Tipi | ![]() |
Temporary house |
Thunderbird | ![]() |
Unlimited Happiness, Caller of Rain |
Thunderbird Track | ![]() |
Bright Prospect |
Water Running | ![]() |
Constant Life |
Wolf Paw | ![]() |
Freedom, Success |
Zuni Bear | ![]() |
Good Health |
Compiled, designed, and edited by Kathy Alexander/Legends of America, updated January 2025.
Also See:
Blythe Intaglios – Nazca Lines in California
Native American Totem Animals & Their Meanings
Sources:
Artsology
Geology.com
National Park Service
Native American Roots