From Google News: Earliest wall art is found in France
<P>
WASHINGTON — A massive block of limestone in France contains what
scientists believe are the earliest known engravings of wall art dating
back some 37,000 years, according to a study published Monday.
The
1.5 metric ton ceiling piece was first discovered in 2007 at Abri
Castanet, a well known archeological site in southwestern France which
holds some of the earliest forms of artwork, beads and pierced shells.
According
to New York University anthropology professor Randall White, lead
author of the paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, the art was likely meant to adorn the interior of a shelter
for reindeer hunters.
"They decorated the places where they were living, where they were doing all their daily activities," White told AFP.
"There
is a whole question about how and why, and why here in this place at
this particular time you begin to see people spending so much time and
energy and imagination on the graphics."
The images range from
paintings of horses to "vulvar imagery" that appears to represent female
sex organs, carved into the low ceiling that rose between 1.5 to two
meters (yards) from the floor, within reach of the hunters.
The
work is less sophisticated than the elaborate paintings of animals found
in France's Grotte Chauvet, which was more remote and difficult to
access, believed to be between 30,000 and 36,000 years old.
In
contrast, the engravings and paintings at Castanet, which carbon dating
showed were about 37,000 years old, are rougher and more primitive in
style, and were likely done by everyday people.
"This art appears
to be slightly older than the famous paintings from the Grotte Chauvet
in southeastern France," said White, referring to the cave paintings
discovered in 1994.
"But unlike the Chauvet paintings and
engravings, which are deep underground and away from living areas, the
engravings and paintings at Castanet are directly associated with
everyday life, given their proximity to tools, fireplaces, bone and
antler tool production, and ornament workshops."
However, even
though the artwork is vastly different, archeologists believe the
artists came from the same Aurignacian culture which comprised the first
modern humans in Europe, replacing the Neanderthals. They lived from
40,000 years ago until about 28,000 years ago.
"Early Aurignacian humans functioned, more or less, like humans today," said White.
"They
had relatively complex social identities communicated through personal
ornamentation, and they practiced sculpture and graphic arts."
Co-authors on the paper came from leading archeology labs and universities in France and Britain.
In
a separate study published last week in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, French scientists described the paintings at
Chauvet as "the oldest and most elaborate ever discovered."
Those
finding were based on an analysis -- called geomorphological and
chlorine-36 dating -- of the rock slide surfaces around what is believed
to be the cave's only entrance.
No comments:
Post a Comment