The rock shelters and caves of Bhimbetka have a large number of paintings. Some of the oldest paintings are dated to 10,000 BCE, The colours used are vegetable colours which have endured through time because the drawings were generally made deep inside a niche or on inner walls.
Period I – (
Upper Paleolithic): These are linear representations in green of humans dancing and hunting.
Period II – (
Mesolithic): Comparatively small in size the stylised figures in this group show linear decorations on the body. In addition to animals there are human figures and hunting scenes, giving a clear picture of the weapons they used: barbed
spears, pointed sticks,
bows and arrows. The depiction of communal dances, birds, musical instruments, mothers and children, pregnant women, men carrying dead animals, drinking and burials appear in rhythmic movement.
Period III – (
Chalcolithic) Similar to the paintings of the Mesolithic, these drawings reveal that during this period the cave dwellers of this area were in contact with the agricultural communities of the
Malwa plains, exchanging goods with them.
Period IV & V – (Early historic): The figures of this group have a schematic and decorative style and are painted mainly in red, white and yellow. The association is of riders, depiction of religious symbols, tunic-like dresses and the existence of scripts of different periods. The religious beliefs are represented by figures of
yakshas, tree gods and magical sky chariots.
Period VI & VII – (
Medieval): These paintings are geometric linear and more schematic, but they show degeneration and crudeness in their artistic style. The colors used by the cave dwellers were prepared by combining black
manganese oxides, red
hematite and
charcoal. One rock, popularly referred to as "Zoo Rock", depicts
elephants,
barasingha (swamp deer),
bison and
deer. Paintings on another rock show a
peacock, a
snake, a deer and the sun. On another rock, two elephants with tusks are painted. Hunting scenes with hunters carrying bows,
arrows,
swords, and shields also find their place in the community of these pre-historic paintings. In one of the caves, a bison is shown in pursuit of a hunter while his two companions appear to stand helplessly nearby; in another, some horsemen are seen, along with archers. In one painting, a large wild bovine (possibly a
gaur or
bison) is seen. Yashodhar Mathpal has conducted a very careful study of the various animals depicted in these rock shelters. He has identified sloth bear, wolf, hyaena, rhinoceros, wild cattle, deer, antelopes, hare, monkeys, anteater, rats, fish, turtle, peafowl, some birds without any details among the wild animals and a domesticated dog. Deer and antelope are amongst the most numerous of the wild animals depicted. The pictures include groups of hunters; one such group is depicted as running away from a rhinoceros. Other groups are engaged in hunting deer, antelopes and other prey. Spear and bow and arrow are the main weapons of hunt; fish and turtle are being caught in a net, and rats are being driven out of their burrows to be caught. The paintings are classified largely in two groups, one as depictions of hunters and food gatherers, and in others as fighters, riding on horses and elephant carrying metal weapons. The first group of paintings date to prehistoric times while second one dates to historic times. Most of the paintings from the historic period depict battles between rulers carrying swords, spears, bows and arrows. It is estimated that paintings in at least 100 rock shelters might have eroded away. File:Dancing painting at Bhimbetka.jpg|Mesolithic dancers File:Rock Shelter 15, Bhimbetka 02.jpg|A man being attacked by a horned bovine. File:Bhimbetka.JPG|Rock painting dated to 8,000 - 3,000 BCE depicting a humpless
bovine. File:Bhimbetka rock paintng1.jpg|people hunting animal File:Bhimbetka Cave Paintings.jpg|People riding horses holding weapons File:Rock Shelter at Bhimbetka.jpg|Man riding elephant File:Bhimbetka Natraj painting.jpg|An eroded painting in the caves showing a man dancing and holding a trident-like staff == "
Dickinsonia fossils" ==