Posted on 11/12/2010 8:08:52 PM PST by SunkenCiv
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WOW! What a find. Incredible that they are that old and I marvel at 1,000 old Indian rock carvings.
Oops.
“1,000 old”:
“1,000 year old”
Where’s the link?
Oops. Click the pic, it links to the story. Guess I neglected to paste it in, hard as that is to believe, I’m no rookie...
http://www.dp-news.com/pages/detail.aspx?l=2&articleId=62571
Excuse me, but doesn’t 10th millenium BC ecuate to approx. 10,000 BC? Wouldn’t this set known discoveries on its head? Or, is the article incorrect on its dates?
Good catch. I suspect they meant 10th century B.C.
Nope.. “agricultural revolution” was about 14k years ago.
Actually, new discoveries are being made frequently enough now that some of the older accepted dates are being discarded.
For example, we now know that much of the Persian Gulf was dry land 10,000 years ago. As the great ice sheets melted and sea levels world-wide rose, areas previously inhabited became flooded and peoples migrated inland. Some of those previously inhabited but now flooded abodes have been found, on the sea floor between England and France, and stone cities 35 km off the southern coasts of India.
Since the ice sheets actually began melting 15,000 years ago, this puts the beginnings of human civilization back quite a few millenia!
Wow. That’s quite a find. 10th millenium BC would make it 12,000 years old.
Thanks for clarifying that.
And won't it be a kicker when they find out a major point of origin was the Amazon basin.
Yes, there is that, and southern India and Indonesia.
Is this find identified with Sumer? Same general area. Sounds like in the region where Ur was/is to me.
The pre-Sumerian Ur is known as Ubaid; the Sumerians themselves said they’d come in from the Persian Gulf. This find is older, and not a precursor; from the Neolithic or New Stone Age. The article sez it dates from the dawn of agriculture, but a sample of multirow barley (which is a domesticated form, and requires irrigation) from (if memory serves) somewhere NE of this site, RC dated to 14,000 years ago.
Thanks all! While I had my lazy self in bed sleeping, all of you kept busy.
For more Syrian/Anatolian stuff (not quite as old), here’s a nice page:
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/?period=02®ion=wae
An early Obama bureaucrat.
The timeline at that site says "Pre-pottery neolithic, 10,000-7,000 B.C." and yet the article we are discussing in this thread is talking about finds from 10,000 B.C. and you show what appears to be a pottery vessel in your post.
Is this a conflict, or am I missing something (which would not be unusual where archaeology is concerned)?
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