Posted on 06/05/2020 8:11:02 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Australian researchers are exploring the backstory to the most detailed examples ever found of a rare form of rock art.
The miniature stencils are too small to have been made by tracing articles or body parts, suggesting models first had to be created.
Seventeen images were found in the Yilbilinji rockshelter at Limmen National Park in the southwest Gulf of Carpentaria region of northern Australia by a team of archaeologists, anthropologists, park rangers and representatives of the traditional Marra people.
Only two other examples of such works have been uncovered anywhere in the world, the researchers say: one at Nielson's Creek in New South Wales, Australia, and one at Kisar Island in Indonesia.
In both cases these were of human figures only. The Yilbilinji images found in 2017 depict a wide range of motifs, including human figures, crabs, long-necked turtles, kangaroo paws, boomerangs and geometric shapes.
Intrigued, Flinders University archaeologist Liam Brady and colleagues from Flinders and the Monash Indigenous Centre set out to discover how they were made.
One clue came from the fact most had rounded or curved edges, suggesting they were made using something that could be easily moulded and stuck to the rock surface.
Another came from Monash anthropologist John Bradley, who remembered seeing beeswax being used by people in the area for a range of purposes, including repairing spears and harpoons and making toys.
(Excerpt) Read more at cosmosmagazine.com ...
Quite some gallery. The Yilbilinji rockshelter in Australia's Gulf of Carpentaria. Credit: Flinders University.
Good article, SunkenCiv.
Thank you, for posting it. :)
Here are the other GGG topics introduced since the previous Digest ping:
My pleasure.
Ingenious technique. Thanks for sharing.
Their modern sample looks like a gingerbread man, made me hungry.
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