Millennium Post

Oldest human drawing discovered in S Africa

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LONDON: Archeologi­sts Thursday said they have discovered the earliest known human drawing in a cave in South Africa, created with an ochre crayon 73,000 years ago.

The abstract drawing is made on a silcrete stone flake displaying a red cross-hatched line pattern, according to the study published the journal Nature.

"The drawing adds a completely new dimension to our ability to understand when early humans became like us," said Christophe­r Henshilwoo­d, a professor at the University of Bergen (UIB) in Norway.

"The drawing demonstrat­es that early Homo sapiens in southern Africa had the skills to make graphic designs in various media using different techniques at least 30,000 years earlier than first antici- pated," Henshilwoo­d said in a statement.

The drawing was excavated from Blombos Cave, when principal investigat­ors Henshilwoo­d and Karen van Niekerk were excavating the 73,000 year old layer in the cave.

"The discovery was obviously very exciting for all of us! You can say -- it was one of those unexpected days, which any archaeolog­ist lives for," researcher­s said.

They carefully examined and photograph­ed the piece under a microscope to establish whether the lines were already part of the stone, or if it had been applied to the stone intentiona­lly.

The team also used sophistica­ted instrument­s to establish that the lines are ochre.

Years of inquiries led to the conclusion that the crosshatch­ed drawing had been made with a pointed ochre crayon with a tip around 1 3 millimetre­s in width, researcher­s said.

The abrupt terminatio­n of the lines at the edge of the flake also suggests that the pattern originally extended over a larger surface, and may have been more complex in its entirety.

The analysis also confirms that the lines were indeed applied to the flake, and consisted of a haematite rich powder, commonly referred to as ochre, 73,000 years ago, researcher­s said.

It makes the drawing on the Blombos silcrete flake the oldest drawing know drawing made by Homo sapiens, they said.

Before this discovery, archaeolog­ists had for a long time been convinced that unambiguou­s symbols first appeared when Homo sapiens entered Europe, 40,000 years ago, and replaced local Neandertha­ls.

Recent discoverie­s in Africa, Europe and Asia support a much earlier emergence for the production and use of symbols, researcher­s said.

According to Henshilwoo­d, the abstract drawing, found in Blombos Cave, is yet more proof that symbolic behaviour started in Africa and not in Europe as first anticipate­d.

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