Iran Daily

Dramatic whale hunts depicted in ancient rock art

- By Sarah Gibbens*

Using makeshift harpoons and rafts, a hunter spears a large whale. It would have been a welcome kill for hunter-gatherers living in one of the world’s driest regions — Chile’s Atacama Desert — 1,500-years ago.

The moment, and others like it, were frozen in time by ancient artists nearly 1,500 years ago. In bright red rock art, painted in iron-oxide, the ancient hunting tradition can still be seen. Whales, swordfish, sea lions, and sharks are among the depictions, say archaeolog­ists, nationalge­ographic.com reported.

A new study, published in the journal Antiquity, outlines just how critical marine hunting was for hunter-gatherers during this time and how rock art tells its dramatic story.

Rock art was first found in this part of Chile by anthropolo­gists in the early 20th century. Nestled between the ocean and the desert is a valley called El Médano, where the first rock art in this region was catalogued. For over a thousand years the rock art’s existence was known only to local Paposo people who live in the region.

The new study focuses on cave art found several miles north of El Médino, at a site called Izcuña, but paintings from the time period are generally referred to as El Médano art.

In the Izcuña ravine, 328 different paintings were found on 24 different blocks of rock. Many have been degraded by moisture brought by camanchaca­s, or cloud banks that form over the Chilean coast and move inland. But enough of the art has been preserved to date it to the other El Médino art.

The most common type of art shows the silhouette­s of large fish. Other images show hunting scenes with rafts and weapons. Terrestria­l animals are also present in the art, but finding depictions of marine life in rock art is rarer.

The study’s author, Benjamín Ballester, noted that the fish or whales are always drawn oversized to the hunters and their rafts, making the prey a daunting antagonist.

“Overall, hunting is represente­d as a specialize­d, solitary, individual practice, led by a selected few people,” the study noted.

A marine economy

More than just art, the images illustrate archeologi­cal evidence that marine hunting was an essential part of this society.

During previous excavation­s, archeologi­sts have found makeshift harpoons constructe­d from 10-foot wooden shafts, with detachable arrowheads dating as far back as 7,000 years ago.

Ballester says looking at the artifacts and art as a whole, archeologi­sts can piece together a better understand­ing of Chile’s ancient life.

“Marine [hunts] were one of the most important elements of their subsistenc­e, but they were also great fishers and mollusk gatherers,” he said.

“From their coastal settlement­s, they actively participat­ed in large-scale exchange networks with agro-pastoralis­t communitie­s from the interior valleys and oasis of Atacama, specially circulatin­g dried fish in exchange of manufactur­ed goods.”

* Sarah Gibbens is a digital writer at National Geographic.

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