
| <- Plumed figure (left down) - | - Megaceros like figure (right up) -> |
Engraving technique. All the engraved figures are done by very fine scratched lines (described in Italian with the term of "filiforme", it means like a thread). The internal colour of the engravings can be darker, lighter, or the same as the external surface, depending a lot on percolation and vegetal or mineral alteration. Anyway it's very clear that a well defined kind of figures (horses and warriors, see the Iron-Age section by A. Fossati) are much lighter ("white") than all the others. All the figures can be easily obtained by a stone or a metal point. The lighter figures show longer curved and less deep lines (as if executed only by a light scratch, and not engraved), and so they were probably obtained by a metal point (a little knife is sufficient), In the other figures we can find a lot of best detailed particulars, as for example the whiskers of a gazelle-like figure. We can sometimes find a deeper point at the beginning of the line, probably caused by the first impact of the stone tool.
Superimpositions. Thus it's sure that many superimpositions between figures lie on the rock surface, it's quite impossible to detect them without a microscope. The most noticeable evidence is that the already described lighter figures have been executed after the darker ones. But if we look attentively at the intersection of the lines we can notice that the newest ones don't cut the oldest: they simply "jump" across. It means that they were executed with a minor pressure. It also means that, if the internal colour of the engraved lines was the same, we wouldn't be able in a technical way to detect any priority. We can only detect which figure has been executed with a harder pressure.| <- Roof like figure (left down) - | - Mammoth like figure (right up) -> |
New discoveries, figures and styles. The final result of the tracing shows a huge and close intersection of hundreds (thousands?) of scratched lines. Particularly the central area is completely filled. We can find the first engraved lines a few centimetres up to the soil level (corresponding with the mother-rock level). The upper lines has been executed higher than 2.50 m, thus utilising artificial stairs (or something like them). The rock is now under study, and all the figures not yet entirely recognised. For the moment we can recognise:
| <- Gazzelle-like figure (left down) - | - Female figure (right up) -> |
As already stated in the introductory part, all these kinds of figures are well present in Palaeolithic cave or mobiliar art.