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    Home»Anthropology

    Is this peculiar small rock the oldest known animal carving?

    By Carlos HansenApril 3, 2024 Anthropology 5 Mins Read
    – 202404rock sculpture
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    The rock itself doesn't appear impressive, and even the researchers aren't completely sure this is a sculpture. However, there's a lot of indirect evidence suggesting it.

    suggested stingray sculpture rock
    The upper surface (a)and the lower surface of the alleged sand sculpture(b), along with a depiction of a blue stingray. Image credits: Helm et al / Rock Art Reseach.

    When it comes to archaeology or anthropology, there's always some guesswork — and the further back you go, the more guesswork there is. History is unclear, and ancient history is even more uncertain. It's difficult to determine what occurred centuries ago, let alone 10,000 years or more. So why is this 130,000-year-old rock from South Africa so compelling?

    A curious stone

    The story begins in 2008. Researchers were working in an area called Still Bay, around 205 miles (330 kilometers) from Cape Town, South Africa. The rocks in the area are eolianites — rocks formed from the cementation of sediment brought by wind. This type of rock typically forms around wind-blown sand dunes that, over time, solidify and often preserve any impressions or traces.

    For a decade, the researchers described the fossilized tracks of large Pleistocene animals such as lions, rhinoceros, elephants, giant buffalo and crocodiles, as well as footprints left by hominins. The Pleistocene is the geological period that occurred from 2.58 million to 11,700 years ago.

    “Then, in 2018, one of our “citizen scientist” supporters, Emily Brink, spotted an intriguing rock east of Still Bay, about 330 km east of Cape Town. The rock was unusually symmetrical and was shaped uncannily like a stingray, minus the tail,” writes Alan Whitfield, one of the study authors, in an article on The Conversation.

    – upload 39
    The location of the rock. Image cerdits: Helm et al / Rock Art Reseach.

    Describing the rock

    This particular rock first stands out because of its shape. It’s almost symmetrical, with grooves on one side that also appear to be symmetrical. The base of the rock is stubbed. If this is indeed a representation of a stingray, that’s where the tail would have been.

    The research team suggests that this could be an ammoglyph: an anthropogenic pattern or sculpture registered in unconsolidated sand, now preserved on a paleosurface of rock. Basically, someone would have carved the drawings into the sand, and the sand consolidated in this rock shape. The researchers propose that this object may represent one of the earliest known examples of representational art, a significant leap in the cognitive and cultural development of Homo sapiens.

    “Why do we use words like “posit” and “believe”, rather than being more confident and assertive? Firstly, we cannot prove our interpretation, and others cannot falsify it. It therefore represents speculation — although it is highly informed speculation based on our understanding of many tens of thousands of such rocks. Secondly, ancient palaeoart is rare in the archaeological record, and may be harder to recognise than more recent art: we really don’t know how much we don’t know,” the researcher notes.

    Old art?

    – upload 40
    (a) The upper part of the supposed sand sculpture; (b) features that are the same on both sides; (c) features that are not the same on both sides. Image credits: Helm et al / Rock Art Reseach.

    The scientists also used a method called optically stimulated luminescence to determine the age of the rock. They discovered that it is from the Middle Stone Age, about 130,000 years ago.

    For comparison, the earliest confirmed Homo sapiens cave art dates to 43,9000 years ago in Indonesia. Some researchers have suggested that some Neanderthal cave art may be even older, at 57,000 years old. But this rock is more than twice that age.

    The only known art that we can compare it to are some handprints made by children in the Tibetan Plateau. But researchers aren’t really sure if that’s art, and they’re not really sure if it was made by humans, either.

    There’s another tantalizing clue. This rock was found relatively near to (30 km away) the Blombos Cave. This cave is renowned for its paleoart. That includes an engraving on ochre dating back 77,000 years and a 73,000-year-old drawing.

    Significant if true

    If this interpretation is correct, and if this is indeed a stingray carving, it’s important for several reasons. Firstly, it would be the oldest known example of humans creating an image of a creature other than themselves — by far. It would also show that 130,000 years ago, people were making sand castles and sand art, much like they do today.

    There’s still a great deal of uncertainty regarding this interpretation. And it’s not clear whether this interpretation will ever be cleared up. But even amidst this uncertainty, the rock stands as a tantalizing testament to the potential depths of human creativity and symbolic thought — far earlier in our history than previously documented.

    “Art is such an important part of our existence as humans. This means that ideas on how and when it began are of interest and importance to many. If our suggestion is correct, it would not only push back the time when our distant ancestors first created art of another species, but could also help explain what has until now seemed enigmatic: the seemingly sudden appearance of magnificent art on walls deep within caves in western Europe.”

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