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  • Francisco Arce, an experienced guide to the region's cave paintings and archeological sites, sits with his family at his home in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 30, 2009. His wife holds their baby son born with blue eyes, a sign of mixed European ancestry.
    090130_2961.JPG
  • INAH (Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia) custodian Enrique Arce sits at the dinner table in his home in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 30, 2009. All trips to the cave painting sites in the area, designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site, must be arranged through Arce.
    090130_2986.JPG
  • INAH (Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia) custodian Enrique Arce sits at his home in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 30, 2009. All trips to the cave painting sites in the area, designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site, must be arranged through Arce.
    090130_2982.JPG
  • A woman passes young cheese curds, prepared that morning from fresh goat's milk, through a strainer to remove excess liquid in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 31, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090131_3099.JPG
  • Blocks of goat cheese mature under a cloth screen tent in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 31, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090131_3067.JPG
  • A woman carries a bucket filled with fresh goat's milk as others gather the herd in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 31, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090131_3028.JPG
  • Clothes hang to dry outside at sunset in a clearing in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 30, 2009.
    090130_2974.JPG
  • A man closes the gate to the enclosure holding his family's goat herd in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 27, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090127_2400.JPG
  • Children help with the management and milking of the family goat herd in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 27, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090127_2332.JPG
  • A woman presses cheese curds, prepared that morning from fresh goat's milk, through a strainer to remove excess liquid in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 31, 2009. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090131_3108.JPG
  • An elderly woman stands by the goat cheese she spends every morning preparing from the milk she collects daily from her goats in San Francisco de la Sierra, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 27, 2009.  Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the area.
    090127_2182.JPG
  • Ethan Welty visits the Cueva de La Flechas (Cave of the Arrows) rock paintings in the Sierra de San Francisco, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The cave painting site gets its name from two large human figures pierced with arrows. The region, rich in pictograph and petroglyph sites, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.
    090129_2898.JPG
  • Ethan Welty visits the Cueva de La Flechas (Cave of the Arrows) rock paintings in the Sierra de San Francisco, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The cave painting site gets its name from two large human figures pierced with arrows. The region, rich in pictograph and petroglyph sites, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.
    090129_2899_pan.JPG
  • Large red-and-black human figures wearing elaborate headdresses dominate the mural at Cueva de La Flechas (Cave of the Arrows) in the Sierra de San Francisco, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The cave painting site gets its name from two human figures pierced with arrows. The region, rich in pictograph and petroglyph sites, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.
    090129_2894_pan.JPG
  • Large red-and-black human figures wearing elaborate headdresses dominate the mural at Cueva de La Flechas (Cave of the Arrows) in the Sierra de San Francisco, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The cave painting site gets its name from two human figures pierced with arrows. The region, rich in pictograph and petroglyph sites, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.
    090129_2892_pan.JPG
  • A shopkeeper weighs the block of goat cheese she is buying for her corner store at Leche Caracol dairy company employee housing outside Vizcaino, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 31, 2009. "Pepe" drives down from San Francisco de la Sierra every week to supply goat cheese to the shops in the valley. Making goat cheese is the primary activity and source of income for the ranches in the Sierra.
    090131_3146.JPG
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