Irish Independent

Ancient cave art dates roots of religion to 44,000 years ago

Wall painting: ‘Supernatur­al’ hunting scenes

- Sarah Knapton

THE roots of religion and spirituali­ty may have begun on a small Indonesian island, not Europe, the oldest cave paintings in the world suggest.

Archaeolog­ists have discovered the earliest-ever hunting scene, dating from around 44,000 years ago, which portrays a group of part-human, part-animal figures hunting large mammals with spears or ropes.

It is the oldest-known rock art ever found, and predates similar European hunting scenes found in France and Spain by more than 20,000 years. But the new scene goes further, showing figures known as therianthr­opes, which share both animal and human features.

The strange figures are depicted killing two pigs and four dwarf buffaloes, known as anoas, which still inhabit the island’s forests. Archaeolog­ists believe it represents the earliest evidence of humans imagining the existence of supernatur­al beings, a cornerston­e of religious experience.

“The images of therianthr­opes may represent the earliest evidence for our capacity to conceive of things that do not exist in the natural world, a basic concept that underpins modern religion,” said Associate Professor Adam Brumm from the Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution (ARCHE) at Griffith University, Queensland.

“Therianthr­opes occur in the folklore or narrative fiction of almost every modern society and they are perceived as gods, spirits, or ancestral beings in many religions worldwide.

“Sulawesi is now home to the oldest image of this kind. Early Indonesian­s were creating art that may have expressed spiritual thinking about the special bond between humans and animals long before the first art was made in Europe, where it has often been assumed the roots of modern religious culture can be traced.”

Previously, archaeolog­ists believed the origins of spirituali­ty began in Europe, where the earliest evidence of grave goods and therianthr­opic cave paintings emerged in the Upper Paleolithi­c, suggesting humans had begun to believe in supernatur­al beings from around 30,000 years ago.

A small figurine of a lionheaded human was also found in Germany which dates to 40,000 years ago and was thought to be the oldest depiction of a therianthr­ope.

But the new examples at the cave of Leang Bulu’ Sipong 4 in the Maros-Pangkep limestone cave region of south Sulawesi, suggests ritual behaviour and complex art had evolved far earlier.

By measuring the radioactiv­e decay of uranium and other elements within mineral growths that had formed on the paintings, experts put the minimum ages of the art to between 35,100 to 43,900 years ago.

“All of the major components of a highly advanced artistic culture were present in Sulawesi by 44,000 years ago,” said Professor Maxime Aubert of ARCHE.

 ?? PHOTO: MAXIME AUBERT VIA PA ?? Half-human, half- animal:
One of the fragile paintings found on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
PHOTO: MAXIME AUBERT VIA PA Half-human, half- animal: One of the fragile paintings found on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.

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