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Prehistori­c ‘hashtag’ may be world’s oldest drawing: study

- AFP.

IT MAY BE a symbol of the Internet age but scientists in South Africa have found an ancient hashtag scrawled on a piece of rock that they believe is the world’s oldest “pencil” drawing.

The design, which archaeolog­ists say was created around 73,000 years ago, pre-dates previously identified abstract drawings from Africa, Europe and Southeast Asia by at least 30,000 years.

It was found by researcher­s inside the Blombos Cave, around 300 kilometers east of Cape Town, a site that contains evidence of some of the earliest instances of what humans today would call culture.

Previous expedition­s to the cave found shell beads, engraved pieces of ocher and even tools manufactur­ed from a rudimentar­y cement-like substance.

Among the artifacts was a small flake of silicate rock, onto which a three-by-six line cross-hatched pattern had been intentiona­lly drawn in red ocher.

“Our microscopi­c and chemical analyses of the pattern confirm that red ocher pigment was intentiona­lly applied to the flake with an ocher crayon,” the team wrote in a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

They said the pattern appearing on the fragment may have originally extended over a larger area and could have been “more complex in its entirety.”

Although there are far older known cave engravings, including one in Java that is at least half-a-million years old, the team of researcher­s said the Blombos Cave hashtag was the oldest known drawing.

“This reinforces the idea that drawing was something that existed in the minds of the hunter-gatherers,” Francesco d’Errico, a director of the National Centre for Scientific Research at the University of Bordeaux, told

While drawings such as the one unearthed in South Africa undoubtedl­y had a “symbolic meaning” Mr. d’Errico said early humans “probably didn’t consider them as art.” —

 ??  ?? A HANDOUT photo released by Nature Publishing Group shows the Blombos Cave drawing with ocher pencil on silcrete stone.
A HANDOUT photo released by Nature Publishing Group shows the Blombos Cave drawing with ocher pencil on silcrete stone.

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