In Luine one can see the oldest rock engravings of the Camuno cycle, dating back to the Mesolithic period, possibly made by semi-nomadic hunters who used the valley as hunting territory at the end of the great ice ages. Later the area was abandoned to become a place of worship and engraving again towards the end of the Neolithic period and especially in the Bronze and Iron Ages.The main rocks have explanatory signs, and all routes are well marked and maintained. We point out Big Rock 34, unmissable for its historical importance and artistic beauty. It is a huge sloping surface that the engravings cover almost completely, embracing the entire Camunian artistic cycle: from the large animal silhouette dated to about 10,000 years ago, to Iron Age warriors from the 1st millennium B.C.