The Jesuit Stone Maps are the real deal. Peraltas had nothing to do with any of it. Some of the symbols on the Preist Map are used interchangeably as other meanings but you have to know where you are on the trail and which sign you are looking at. For instance, the double circle is used to denote two big quartz eye-catchers but is also used to denote the mine shaft also, on the Horse Map (Sort of) and in the Heart Cavity. I had spent 25 years studying monuments we were finding and yes, Kenworthy advanced us a bit, but not a lot. People make it all too complicated. Basic common sense is your best tool. My grandfather found one of the big quartz eye-catchers and told us someone did some stone work on it. He didn't go far enough up the canyon to see the second one, which is a glorious Sun Sign that only lights up about three hours. My partner and I came around a bend in the trail on the other canyon wall in just the nick of time one day, back in about 1992. It was shining to high heaven. Having been to the other eye catcher a little to the south that my Grandfather found, we pulled out the map and ruler and a pencil. That changed everything in five minutes. If you print out a copy of the Preist Map, then get a ruler and a pencil and draw lines from the symbols, you will begin to see, If you are half smart, you will have the layout as it sits in the mountains. You will not however, know the exact location. There are more secrets on the different maps that work together to bring the whole thing into view. One trail map is missing so that has put the hunters in exactly the wrong location forever but it can be figured out without it. The 18 places, (“I go to 18 locations”) I can show you on Google Earth. I love it when people here give others a hard time about using Google Earth. In some cases, G.E. is the most valuable tool a hunter could have. I really love it when people tell me I don't know what I am talking about. I just think to my self, "You don't know what I'm NOT talking about!"