2025-05-20T17:48:04Z
2025-05-20T17:48:04Z
2025-03-01
2025-05-20T17:48:05Z
This article explores the senses of sight and hearing in Santa Teresa Canyon, Sierra de San Francisco (Baja California, Mexico), where there is a large number of rock art sites of the Great Mural style. This rock art tradition is characterized by the presence of sizeable prehistoric murals depicting large figures. Departing from previous research in which the acoustical properties of the rock art landscape of the canyon were appraised, in this study we look at this in conjunction with visibility. Through the use of a series of tools and procedures implemented through GIS, viewsheds and soundsheds are modelled and assessed in relation to the surrounding landscape. The comparative analysis of emblematic, principal and secondary sites allows us to propose that these categories may have played a complementary role in the construction of a socialized landscape by the native communities that inhabited the Baja California peninsula
Article
Published version
English
Arqueologia; Acústica; Paisatge; Pintura rupestre; Mèxic; Archaeology; Acoustics; Landscape; Rocks paintings; Mexico
Elsevier
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.daach.2025.e00402
Digital Applications in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage, 2025, vol. 36
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.daach.2025.e00402
cc-by (c) González Vázquez, N. et al., 2025
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/