At Ikh Burkhant, a huge image of Janraisag (‘Avalokitesvara’ in Sanskrit) is carved into the hillside, its legs splayed out. The carving was commissioned in 1864 by local regent Bat Ochiriin Togtokhtooriin, or Tovan (van means ‘lord’) and was renovated in the mid-1990s. There are fearsome deities guarding the prayer wheels and eerie shattered stone faces scattered about. If you walk up to its head, you'll see a couple entwined in an eternal stone embrace. Ikh Burkhant is right on the roadside, about 32km northwest of Khalkh Gol; there's a military checkpoint here.