Scientists Discover 10,000-Year-Old Cave Paintings in Brazil


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Scientists Discover 10,000-Year-Old Cave Paintings in Brazil

 

Wildlife Conservation Society biologists have discovered cave paintings made by hunter-gatherers between 10,000 to 4,000 years ago while studying wild animals in the Taboco region, the southwestern Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul.

 

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Paintings of a cat and prey in a cave in the Taboco region, the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Image credit: Liana Joseph / WCS.

 

The discovery was made in 2009, when Dr Alexine Keuroghlian of the Wildlife Conservation Society?s Brazil Program and her colleagues were conducting surveys of white-lipped peccaries, herd-forming pig-like animals that travel long distances and are environmental indicators of healthy forests.

The peccaries are vulnerable to human activities, such as deforestation and hunting, and are disappearing from large swaths of their former range from southern Mexico to northern Argentina.

While following signals from radio-collared white-lipped peccaries and the foraging trails of peccary herds, Dr Keuroghlian?s team encountered a series of prominent sandstone formations with caves containing drawings of animals and geometric figures.

Dr Rodrigo Luis Simas de Aguiar, an archaeologist with the Federal University of Grande Dourados, determined that the Taboco cave paintings were made between 4,000 ? 10,000 years ago by hunter-gatherer societies that either occupied the caves, or used them specifically for their artistic activities. The paintings are described in a paper published in the journal Revista Clio Arqueol?gica.

The style of some paintings is consistent with what archeologists call the Planalto tradition, while others, surprisingly, are more similar to Nordeste or Agreste style drawings.

The paintings depict an assemblage of animals including armadillos, deer, large cats, birds, and reptiles, as well as human-like figures and geometric symbols.

The scientists hope to conduct cave floor excavations and geological dating at the sites in order to fully interpret the paintings.

 

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  • 2 months later...

So modern man may have been around longer than we first thought?

 

No... they pretty much estimated already that the first NA / SA peoples traversed the Asian/NA land bridge some 20,000 years ago, if I am not mistaken.  But I probably am.  :P

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