Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Prehistoric art
news

Plan to build border wall along the Rio Grande in Texas threatens prehistoric rock art, locals warn

Archaeologists and landowners claim the proposed extension of the Mexico-US border wall in Val Verde County could damage thousands of millennia-old cave paintings located within a designated national historic landmark

Alton Yan
31 March 2026
Share
A rock art mural known as the "white shaman" along the Lower Pecos River in Texas Photo by Robert Shea, via Flickr

A rock art mural known as the "white shaman" along the Lower Pecos River in Texas Photo by Robert Shea, via Flickr

Plans to extend the Mexico-US border wall through parts of Val Verde County, Texas, are drawing concern from archaeologists and local landowners, who warn that construction could damage prehistoric rock art sites in the Lower Pecos region.

Residents near the Rio Grande, including the landowner Raymond Skiles Jr., told the local news station KSAT that they have received federal notices indicating that a wall could cut directly across private property in the rugged terrain west of Del Rio, Texas, near where the Pecos River flows into the Rio Grande. The area is home to hundreds of rock art murals in the Pecos River style, some of which were created as early as 5,700 years ago. According to Carolyn Boyd, an archaeologist at Texas State University and the founder of the Shumla Archaeological Research & Education Center, the region was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2021, underscoring its extreme importance.

“Yet, here we are today—faced with the possibility that the very government that assigned this designation (and) recognised its importance—may be responsible for its destruction through the (border) wall,” Boyd told KSAT.

The Lower Pecos River near the confluence with the Rio Grande along the Mexico-US border Photo by Chris Vreeland, via Flickr

Last year, when a study co-authored by Boyd revealed the 4,000-year range during which the murals were painted, she told Live Science: “Many of the 200-plus murals in the region are huge; some span over 100ft long and 20ft tall and contain hundreds of skillfully painted images.” She likened the canyons where the murals were created to an “ancient library containing hundreds of books authored by 175 generations of painters”.

As recently as 2021, the most immediate risks to the region's rich archaeological heritage were thought to be drug cartels and flooding. Now, Boyd estimates that around 80 known sites would fall south of the proposed wall, with an additional 13 within 500m of it. Skiles and others fear that construction vibrations could destabilise rock surfaces and permanently damage the art.

Archaeology

Archaeologists rush to record the Rio Grande’s art amid threat from flooding and drug cartels

Gabriella Angeleti

In a statement, a spokesperson for US Customs and Border Protection told KSAT that the agency had conducted outreach and environmental assessments for the project and aims to mitigate impacts on cultural and environmental resources. However, some residents and researchers remain sceptical; neither Boyd nor Skiles was aware of any public outreach related to the border wall construction.

The timeline for the border wall’s extension across Val Verde County remains uncertain, and negotiations over the broader Big Bend segment are ongoing. For now, the fate of the Pecos River rock art remains unresolved.

Prehistoric artRock art US politicsArchaeologyTexas
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Rock artnews
27 April 2021

Boat carvings found in Norway may be the oldest in Europe

Life-size examples of rock art could have served as signposts when early Scandinavians populated the Mesolithic seascape

Garry Shaw
Archaeologynews
14 March 2024

How ancient cave art is rewriting Puerto Rican history

Recent study shows that humans inhabited and made art in the archipelago thousands of years earlier than previously thought

Gabriella Angeleti
Archaeologynews
10 May 2021

Archaeologists rush to record the Rio Grande’s art amid threat from flooding and drug cartels

Ancient rock art near Texas-Mexico border could be lost forever

Gabriella Angeleti