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Tanbaly

Coordinates: 43°48′10″N 75°32′06″E / 43.80275°N 75.53495°E / 43.80275; 75.53495
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Petroglyphs within the Archaeological Landscape of Tamgaly
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Petroglyphs of Tamgaly, Kazakhstan
CriteriaCultural: iii
Reference1145
Inscription2004 (28th Session)

Tamgaly is a petroglyph site in the Semirechye, Kazakhstan. Tamgaly is located 120 km to northwest of Almaty, and takes about two and a half hours as the side road to Tamgaly is in poor condition (August 2013). The site is open to visitors, and the guards can assist you to head in the right direction along a gravel path. The main petroglyphs can be reached in about 15 minutes from the car park. The majority of the 5000 petroglyphs are in the main canyon, but there are a number in the many side canyons. The petroglyphs are mostly Bronze Age, but in some cases from the Iron Age and the Medieval.[1]

The name Tamgaly in Kazakh and other Turkic languages means "painted or marked place".

Tamgaly became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2004. (See List of World Heritage Sites in Kazakhstan)

Ancient stone carvings (petroglyphs) found in a small ravine at Tamgaly - maybe this is a picture of a unicorn![citation needed]
Looking across the small ravine that contains the petroglyphs
Petroglyphs of ancient tribal dance and animals
The largest group of petroglyphs in a sacred site


References

  1. ^ Luc Hermann, die Petroglyphen von Tamgaly in Kasachstan, Paris, 2011 http://www.bod.fr/index.php?id=1786&objk_id=498624

43°48′10″N 75°32′06″E / 43.80275°N 75.53495°E / 43.80275; 75.53495