The Briefing Room
General Category => Science, Technology and Knowledge => History => Topic started by: bigheadfred on January 29, 2017, 05:37:42 pm
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NEW YORK UNIVERSITY—An international team of anthropologists has uncovered a 38,000-year-old engraved image in a southwestern French rockshelter—a finding that marks some of the earliest known graphic imagery found in Western Eurasia and offers insights into the nature of modern humans during this period.
"The discovery sheds new light on regional patterning of art and ornamentation across Europe at a time when the first modern humans to enter Europe dispersed westward and northward across the continent," explains NYU anthropologist Randall White, who led the excavation in France's Vézère Valley.
The findings, which appear in the journal Quaternary International, center on the early modern humans' Aurignacian culture, which existed from approximately 43,000 to 33,000 years ago.
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/winter-2017/article/anthropologists-uncover-art-by-really-old-masters-38-000-year-old-engravings
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They must have really good eyesight. I'm seeing the dots but can't make out the wild cows.
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They must have really good eyesight. I'm seeing the dots but can't make out the wild cows.
@ConservativeGranny
I'm thinking it's something like this...
(http://i.imgur.com/DBOSRFg.jpg)
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Thank you Suppressed. That was so kind of you to do that for me. Yes now I can see it. The dotted lines had me very confused.