The Cameo Colorado Panel. Photograph by John Greer.
It should go without saying that any mark made on rock
has significance to the study of rock art. What we dismiss as vandalism is also
data. One longtime mystery in the study of rock art has been symbols that are
commonly called Western Mystery Petroglyphs or Western Message Petroglyphs
(WMPs). These are usually dismissed as ‘modern hoaxes,’ even vandalism.
These have been seriously studied for some time by Leigh
Marymor who has made considerable progress in analyzing some of the
inscriptions.
“The term “Western Message Petroglyphs” (WMPs) refers to a
number of petroglyph sites found scattered among eight western states that
are recognized by their shared image content and layout. The imagery is
drawn largely from a mash-up of late historic Native American
sign-gesture language and picture-writing traditions inter-mixed with
pan-cultural imagery from around the world. An increasing number of sites
that fit this mold have been reported over the past 85 years or so,
currently numbering [40] in all. There is no question that these sites date to
post-European contact based on images in some panels that depict
Euro-American cultural content (e.g., western-style house, rifle, whiskey
keg, horse, etc.). The post-contact era is also apparent in the method used in
rendering the engraved images evidenced by the smooth angular lines and
chisel strikes produced by metal tools.”(Marymor 2023)
Drawing of the Cameo Blissymbolics panel by Daved Lee.
The fact that they were apparently created with metal
tools has led much of the field of rock art research to discount them as not
worth serious study. But they are also data and should be studied for possible
significance.
Far and away the greatest progress on finding meaning in
these enigmatic passages has been made by Leigh Marymor.
“Marymor is a past President of the American Rock Art
Research Association and has served several terms as chair of their
Conservation Committee. He has received numerous awards for his work in
Conservation and Preservation activities, as well as lifetime achievement in
rock art studies and documentation. Leigh Marymor is also the Compiler of
Rock Art Studies: A Bibliographic Database. The RASBdb project is a searchable
bibliographic database of the World's rock art literature and contains more
than 55,450 citations as of January 2026. The RASBdb was hosted as a joint
project between the Bancroft Library (University of California - Berkeley) and
the Bay Area Rock Art Research Association (BARARA) from 2003 - 2016. In
fall of 2016, BARARA affiliated with the Museum of Northern Arizona to continue
the free and open access to the RASBdb Project." (https://mna.academia.edu/LeighMarymor.
2026)
Marymor has recently made a further step in this study by
reading one assumed Western Mystery Petroglyph inscription in the little-known
form of picture-writing known as Blissymbolics.
As perhaps the most knowledgeable researcher on WMPs
Marymor describes them as following.
“While shared imagery and historic landscape settings bind
WMP sites together as a coherent whole, stylistic and compositional variations
exist. Classic examples feature narrative picture-texts arranged in one line,
or in two or more parallel rows (Figure 1), but the database also includes
examples of WMPs laid out in clusters, brief phrases, and minimalist panels
limited to one or two images (Marymor 2023:2, 14).” (Marymor 2026:9)
By applying statistical analysis to these inscriptions,
Marymor not only found them worthy of serious study, but he also made notable
progress in deciphering some of them.
“Approximately 70% of the WMP’s 255-image
vocabulary appears to derive from a mash-up of late historic Native American
picture-writing traditions. Another 24% of the images borrow from diverse
global systems (e.g. Maya, Egyptian, Chinese), and the remaining 6% are generic
or unidentified (Marymor 2023:4). The repetition of individual images, image
compounds, brief image phrases, and formal layout among WMP panels support the
hypothesis of a shared authorship—a central author operating with a small group
of others who were in-the-know, operating between approximately 1880 and 1930
(Marymor and Marymor 2016:76–78).” (Marymor 2025:9)
In 2026, Marymor turned his attention to a supposed WMP
inscription that had been discovered near Cameo, Colorado.
”A linear rock engraving at Cameo, Colorado, was initially
documented on the MysteryGlyphs.com website
by Provo, Utah, independent researchers Terry Carter and Shawn Davies (n.d.).
Leigh Marymor first encountered a photograph of the Cameo rock engravings there
in 2014 and agreed with Carter and Davies that the linear march of pan-cultural
ideograms appeared to represent the WMP style. Also, the semi-remote site
location conformed well with the pattern seen at other WMP sites. Western
Message Petroglyphs are located along historic wagon and rail corridors, dating
to the period of western expansion at nodes along those routes that share
associations with historic town sites, mines, quarries, and often times,
features of the Mormon cultural sphere. The Cameo panel is located on a
semi-remote rock wall adjacent to an old horse trail at the head of Main
Canyon. The WMP panel overlooks the Palisades coal mining district located in
the far distance down canyon.” (Marymor 2025:9)
Charles Bliss demonstrating Blissymbols to young disabled language student. Public domain image from letterformarchive.com.
In a search for more information Marymor (2026) “uploaded
a drawing of the Cameo panel to Google Chrome’s image search engine in January
2025.” This resulted in the revelation that images from this inscription were
a 100% match with a writing system known as Blissymbolics.
The Cameo Colorado panel deciphered in Blissymbolics by Leigh Marymor.
“Blissymbolics—a pictographic writing system developed by
Charles K. Bliss between 1942 and 1949. Charles K. Bliss, an Austrian chemical
engineer, semiotician and Jewish holocaust survivor, fled with his wife to a
refugee community in Shanghai during World War II, and eventually settled in
Sydney, Australia. From 1942 to 1949, Bliss passionately pursued the
development of a universal picture-writing system that would enable communication
without reliance on alphabet-specific systems. He developed his system with
hundreds of picture words and thousands of complex image compounds, complete
with rules of syntax and spacing. Although the project dominated the rest of
his life, his universal picture-writing system never achieved wide acclaim.
Blissymbolics was adopted for use with disabled and language-challenged
children, eventually enabling many who were completely language deprived to
learn how to communicate using his system of Blissymbols . The persistence of
his system is evidenced by the works of the Blissymbolics Communication
International Foundation, its website, and teaching resources on Bliss Online
(n.d.) that include an online dictionary and Blissymbol writing and translation
toolkit.” (Marymor 2025:10) With this lead toward possible meaning Leigh
was able to translate the inscription. His resulting translation read “I
want to walk out of here and possess a woman, in order to feel excited, I’ll
walk with no clothes on.” (Marymor 2025:11)
His assumption, based upon the remote area of the
inscription, is that the risqué engraving is analogous to Basque sheepherder
arborglyphs found throughout the mountainous West. A remarkable detective story
with a very amusing conclusion. Congratulation to Leigh Marymor and the other
people who were involved. For full details of the search and the solution read
the original paper by Leigh Marymor listed in the References below.
NOTE 1: The Rock Art Studies
Bibliographic Database search engine at the Museum of Northern Arizona is
located at: https://musnaz.org/search_rock_art_studies_db/.
NOTE 2: Several
other individuals are listed in Marymor’s article as having been involved in
finding the solution – Terry Carter, Shawn Davies, John and Mavis Greer, George
Decker, Amy Marymor, and Judy Hilbish.
NOTE
3: I wish to express my gratitude to Leigh Marymor for
permission to use his material and images, and his generous assistance with final
corrections and editing.
REFERENCES:
Marymor, Leigh,
2025, A Western Message Petroglyph Site Falls from the Nest:
Reclassifying the Cameo, Colorado, Panel through Blissymbolics, La Pintura,
Volume 51, No. 3, Fall 2025, pages 9-12.
Marymor, Leigh,
2023, Western Message Petroglyphs: A Faux Indian Picture-Writing
Project in the American West. Arts 12: 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12010007.
Accessed online 12 February 26.
Wikipedia, Bliss Symbols, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blissymbols.
SECONDARY REFERENCES:
Marymor, Leigh,
2023, Western Message Petroglyphs: A Faux Indian Picture-Writing
Project in the American West. In World Rock Art Topical Collection, edited
by R.G. Bednarik. Arts 12(1):Issue 7. MDPI AG, Basel. Electronic document,https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/12/1/7,
accessed November 6, 2025.
Marymor, Leigh, and Amy Marymor,
2016, Western Message Petroglyphs: Esoterica in the Wild West. In
American Indian Rock Art, Volume 42, edited by Ken Hedges, pp. 67–79. American
Rock Art Research Association, San Jose, California.