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Anthropology

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Judi Lynn

(162,815 posts)
Thu Jun 8, 2023, 02:04 PM Jun 2023

Newly Discovered Rock Art Panels Depict How Ancient Ancestors Envisioned Creation and Adapted to Cha [View all]

Newly Discovered Rock Art Panels Depict How Ancient Ancestors Envisioned Creation and Adapted to Change

By Andy Corbley -Jun 8, 2023



Figures from the Maliwawa Style depict human/animal hybrids and animals interacting. Courtesy – Paul Tacon

Australia’s vast wildernesses are famous for many things, but rock art, specifically one of the largest concentrations of rock art known in the world, isn’t typically one of them.

West Arnhem Land in the Queensland Peninsula hosts an incredible painted record of Man’s relation to his planet, its changes, challenges, and bounty, but a completely new rock art style covering 4,000 years of history shows Aboriginal Australians adapting to the transformation of Arnhem land into the lush riverine environment it is today.

The total collection of painted rock art in West Arnhem Land has been dated to a span of 30,000 years, stretching from just a few centuries ago to back within the last ice age. However, the period between 8,000 BCE and 4,000 BCE was seemingly absent from the variety of images painted onto the sandstone.

Now, the Bininj, Mawng, and Amurdak Aboriginal people teamed up with archaeologists led by Paul Tacon of Griffith University to finally isolate the works from this hidden period. They show a land in flux, where sea level rise meant the coasts retreated backward 150 feet per year, where mangrove forests came to dominate the near-shore landscape, and increased rainfall fed already swollen rivers.

More:
https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/newly-discovered-rock-art-panels-depict-how-ancient-ancestors-envisioned-creation-and-adapted-to-change/
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