Engraved schist slab may depict palaeolithic campsite

Date:

Share post:

A 13,000 year-old engraving uncovered in Spain may depict a hunter-gatherer campsite, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Marcos Garcia-Diez from University of the Basque Country, Spain, and Manuel Vaquero from Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution – IPHES, Spain.

Engraved schist slab may depict palaeolithic campsite
Detail of a motif inscribed on the stone slab thought to be 13,000 years old 
[Credit: Garcia-Diez et al.]

Manuel Vaquero suggests that this “paleolithic engraving from northeastern Spain brings us the first representation of a human social group.”

Landscapes and features of the everyday world are scarcely represented in Palaeolithic art. The authors of this study analyzed the morphology, or shape, of an engraved schist slab recently found in the Moli del Salt site in Spain, dated to the end of the Upper Palaeolithic, ca. 13,800 years ago.

Engraved schist slab may depict palaeolithic campsite
Engraved schist slab may depict palaeolithic campsite
The stone slab, discovered in 2013 at the Moli del Salt site in Spain, 
may be one of the earliest known depictions of a human campsite 
[Credit: Manuel Vaquero & Marcos Garcia Diez]

The schist slab has seven engraved semicircular motifs with internal lines arranged in two rows. Because of its shape and proportions, the authors have interpreted these motifs as huts. Microscopic and comparative analysis indicate that the seven motifs were engraved using a similar technique and instrument in a very short time.

The analysis of individual motifs and the composition, as well as the ethnographic and archaeological contextualization, lead the authors to suggest that this engraving is a naturalistic depiction of a hunter-gatherer campsite. While scientists can’t be sure what the engraving depicts, the authors of this study suggest this engraving may be one of the first representations of the domestic and social space of a human group.

Source: Public Library of Science [December 02, 2015]

1 COMMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

Ecuador displays priceless artifacts recovered from Germany

Ecuador began on Wednesday exhibiting 13 pre-Columbian artifacts illegally transported to Germany after they were taken from archaeological...

Prehistoric man in the Galilee preferred legumes

A joint study by researchers of the Weizmann Institute and the Israel Antiquities Authority, which examined fava seeds...

Human populations survived the Toba volcanic super-eruption 74,000 years ago

In a study published in Nature Communications, researchers from the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human...

The kouros of Lentini reassembled

The work of reassembling the torso of the kouros of Lentini and Testa Biscari, which belonged to a...

Agios Sozomenos Excavation and Survey Project 2016

The Department of Antiquities of the Republic of Cyprus announced the results of the Agios Sozomenos Excavations and...

Butchered sloth bone lends more evidence to early North American settlement

A Canadian scientist's analysis of ancient animal remains found in Ohio — including the leg bone of an...

250 coffins with mummies and 150 bronze statues found in Saqqara

The Egyptian archaeological mission working in the cemetery of the sacred animals (Bubasteion) in Saqqara uncovered an enormous...

2,300-year-old Iron Age glass workshop discovered in the Czech Republic

In a groundbreaking archaeological discovery, researchers in the Czech Republic have unearthed the oldest known glass workshop north...