thumb|270px|Oxtotitlán in relation to the major Formative Era sites showing Olmec influences in the archaeological record. thumb|270px|A plan of the Oxtotitlán grottos, showing the locations of the various paintings. The yellow lines represent the grotto entrances, while the brown lines show grotto walls. thumb|270px|An artist's rendition of painting 1-D, showing the outline of a ruler and rearing jaguar. Oxtotitlán is a natural rock shelter and archaeological site in Chilapa de Álvarez, Mexican state of Guerrero that contains murals linked to the Olmec motifs and iconography. Along with the n
thumb|270px|Oxtotitlán in relation to the major Formative Era sites showing Olmec influences in the archaeological record. thumb|270px|A plan of the Oxtotitlán grottos, showing the locations of the various paintings. The yellow lines represent the grotto entrances, while the brown lines show grotto walls. thumb|270px|An artist's rendition of painting 1-D, showing the outline of a ruler and rearing jaguar. Oxtotitlán is a natural rock shelter and archaeological site in Chilapa de Álvarez, Mexican state of Guerrero that contains murals linked to the Olmec motifs and iconography. Along with the nearby Juxtlahuaca cave, the Oxtotitlán rock paintings represent the "earliest sophisticated painted art known in Mesoamerica", thus far. Unlike Juxtlahuaca, however, the Oxtotitlán paintings are not deep in a cave system but rather occupy two shallow grottos on a cliff face.
The paintings have been variously dated to perhaps 900 years BCE. It is not known what group or society painted them. It is also not known how Olmec-influenced art came to be painted hundreds of kilometers (or miles) from the Olmec heartland, although caves are prominent on many Olmec-style monuments, including La Venta Altars 4 and 5.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).