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12,000 years of art? Ancient Mongolian elk carvings morph into mysterious wolf symbols
12,000 years of art? Ancient Mongolian elk carvings morph into mysterious wolf symbols

Time of India

time4 days ago

  • Science
  • Time of India

12,000 years of art? Ancient Mongolian elk carvings morph into mysterious wolf symbols

The Altai Mountains in Mongolia have ancient rock carvings that tell a story that goes back 12,000 years. This started out as realistic pictures of elk and has turned into abstract, wolf-like symbols. Elk images in 12,000 years of Altai rock art in western Mongolia have undergone an incredible transformation, according to a recent study by Dr. Esther Jacobson-Tepfer published in the Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Select a Course Category Design Thinking Healthcare Technology PGDM Leadership Product Management Data Analytics Data Science Degree Management Operations Management Project Management healthcare Digital Marketing Artificial Intelligence CXO others MBA MCA Data Science Finance Others Public Policy Cybersecurity Skills you'll gain: Duration: 25 Weeks IIM Kozhikode CERT-IIMK PCP DTIM Async India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 22 Weeks IIM Indore CERT-IIMI DTAI Async India Starts on undefined Get Details How did elk carvings begin and how realistic were they? The new study of rock art in western Mongolia shows that elk images have changed over the past 12,000 years, going from realistic carvings to abstract, symbolic figures that look like wolves. Live Events This change in art style shows how the climate, mobility, and cultural identity in the Altai region have changed a lot over the years. Over the course of thousands of years, both people and animals evolved at the same time. ALSO READ: Astronomer CEO scandal fallout hits Dublin man with same name - Wife demands flowers after husband mistaken for Andy Byron From the Late Paleolithic (around 12,000 BP) to the Bronze Age and into the Early Iron Age, the Altai region, which is where Mongolia, Russia, China, and Kazakhstan converge, has one of the longest continuous rock art traditions in the world. Elk (Cervus elaphus sibiricus) carvings were unique among prehistoric carvings, as per a report by Archaeology Mag. Elk were depicted in their natural settings in the earliest paintings, occasionally alongside their young or alongside other extant creatures like woolly rhinos and mammoths. A profound observational understanding of the natural world was demonstrated by these early representations, which were carved in profile with proportional realism and vestigial legs. When did elk art become abstract and why? Over time, particularly during the Bronze Age, they underwent significant evolution. Elk grew more active and were incorporated into more and more human activity contexts, like hunting. The later Bronze Age saw the transition from realism to abstraction, with the elongated elk, exaggerated antlers, and distorted facial details into shapes resembling snouts or beaks. Over time, elk lost much of their resemblance to the actual animal and instead became a symbol, perhaps of spirituality, clan identity, or status. It would be impossible for painted images to survive outdoors in the Altai Mountains due to the climate and the significant amount of time that has passed since the Bronze and Early Iron Ages. The only known surviving painted elk image is located in Khoit Tsenkir cave in Khovd Aimag. What does this change say about ancient Mongolian life? Social and environmental change seem to be closely linked to this symbolic development. Forests, which were desirable habitats for elk, receded as the Eurasian steppe cooled and dried during the Holocene. As elk moved west, the changing terrain led to a rise in the number of people practicing pastoralism. As carvings emerge at higher elevations over time, rock art itself bears witness to this change. Dr. Jacobson-Tepfer's extensive fieldwork experience in the area highlights the impact of climate and movement on everyday life and art. She discovered a huge glacial boulder that overlooked a wide valley floor in 1995 while surveying Tsagaan Salaa IV. Among hundreds of them, one distorted, unearthly image of an elk was carved on its surface. She described the boulder as more than just an artifact; it was a symbol of changing cultural identity, writing, "It seemed to reflect a complex interweaving of deep geological time, iconography, and its social implications." Eventually, horseback riding altered how people interacted with the outside world. Symbolizing new social hierarchies and mobility, art featured stylized animals on personal items. Once a living component of the natural world, the elk has evolved into a symbolic animal. It vanished entirely from the tradition of art by the time of the Turks. FAQs Why did ancient elk carvings change so dramatically over time? The shift reflects environmental change, increased pastoralism, and a changing cultural identity. What do the abstract elk images depict? More likely to be symbols of status, clan identity, or spiritual belief than actual animals. Economic Times WhatsApp channel )

Ritualistic burials of teenagers — 5,000 years old — found in Turkey. Who were they?
Ritualistic burials of teenagers — 5,000 years old — found in Turkey. Who were they?

Miami Herald

time28-03-2025

  • Science
  • Miami Herald

Ritualistic burials of teenagers — 5,000 years old — found in Turkey. Who were they?

Throughout human history, the leaders of society have ranged from nomadic egalitarians to pharaohs and emperors. Ancient communities of equals have seen the same success as those led by a king, but as time goes on, each form of governance eventually changes. The area of modern-day Turkey during the Bronze Age was understood to be a 'small-scale, egalitarian setting,' but new analysis of 5,000-year-old burials shed doubt on this conclusion — and raise more questions than answers. Başur Höyük is a site from the early Bronze Age located in Siirt, Turkey, that dates to the late fourth and early third millennia B.C., according to a study published March 17 in the peer-reviewed Cambridge Archaeological Journal. The site is considered a 'gateway' settlement in an obsidian-rich region near converging rivers, acting as a 'transit point' for copper and other resources from the highlands to make their way south to Mesopotamia's lowlands, according to the study. When a nearby political system collapsed between 3100 and 2800 B.C., Başur Höyük 'became a focus for the performance of conspicuous and sometimes violent funerary rites,' researchers said. In the new study, researchers analyzed subsidiary burials, or the remains of people that were buried near or around a central burial. The burials were described as 'impressive' and filled with tons of high-value goods like weapons, animal-topped amulets, sceptres, goblets, medallions and stone playing pieces, researchers said. But the more intriguing features of the burials are the human bones. 'Based on skeleton fusion and dentition, they are identified mainly as adolescents aged between 12 and 16 years,' researchers said. 'For instance, two individuals buried in a richly endowed stone tomb are estimated to have been 12 years old at time of death, while the eight subsidiary burials crammed against its entrance in Grave 17 ranged from 12 to 18 years.' The bones showed 'penetrating' blows to the head as likely causes of death, and one burial had 'staggering quantities of metalwork' including textile pins and more than 100 spearheads, according to the study. 'All the bodies associated with this grand burial rite were clothed in elaborate costumes, decorated with non-local materials, of which only the associated beadwork and fragments of textile survive, along with metal fastening pins, some of which reached outsized proportions for a human wearer,' researchers said. As researchers hoped to establish the biological relationships between the teenagers likely sacrificed together, they found that a significant portion of the bodies belonged to teen girls, suggesting a male warrior cult or initiation was unlikely. 'The fact that they are mostly adolescents is fascinating and surprising. It highlights how little thought scientists and historians have really given to the importance of adolescence as a crucial state in the human life cycle,' lead author David Wengrow told LiveScience. 'So we are dealing with adolescents brought together, or coming together voluntarily, from biologically unrelated groups to carry out a very extreme form of ritual.' However, why they were sacrificed is still a mystery. When the burials were first discovered, archaeologists thought they may have belonged to young royals who then sacrificed their attendants. But with additional research suggesting Başur Höyük wasn't a king-based society, it now seems more likely that they were buried together because of their age, and they may not be directly associated, Wengrow told the outlet. 'Much more likely, what we see in the cemetery is a subset of a larger group, other members of which survived the ritual process and went on to full adulthood,' Wengrow told LiveScience. Siirt is in southeastern Turkey, near the borders of Syria and Iraq. The research team includes Wengrow, Brenna Hassett, Haluk Sağlamtimur, William Marsh, Selina Brace, Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch, Emma L. Baysal, Metin Batıhan, İnan Aydoğan, Öznur Özmen Batıhan and Ian Barnes.

Archaeologists perplexed to find Bronze Age burial of ritually sacrificed teens
Archaeologists perplexed to find Bronze Age burial of ritually sacrificed teens

The Independent

time28-03-2025

  • Science
  • The Independent

Archaeologists perplexed to find Bronze Age burial of ritually sacrificed teens

Archaeologists have a discovered a strange abundance of teenagers' remains at 'one of the richest' ancient Mesopotamian grave sites, a puzzling discovery that sheds light on a five millennia old society. The teenagers' skeletons were unearthed at the cemetery of Basur Höyük where researchers previously uncovered evidence of 'grand funerary rituals' and the burial of 'spectacular' quantities of precious metals. This grave site on the upper reaches of the Tigris and Euphrates has perplexed scientists as it challenges the conventional understanding of the formation of the first states by humans. Tombs unearthed here are some of the richest, even though early settlements around the region were found to be otherwise small-scale and egalitarian. Now, a new study published in the journal Cambridge Archaeological Journal raises further questions about the nature of these tombs due to an abundance of teenagers buried here. 'A further, puzzling feature of this cemetery is the preponderance of teenagers in the richest tombs,' scientists write in the study. Researchers conducted an anthropological study, including analysis of DNA from the skeletons buried here, presenting a more nuanced view of the tombs and this early society. Başur Höyük is a Bronze Age community dated to between 3100 BC and 2800 BC. Previous studies have hinted that this period corresponded to the rise of kingship in ancient Mesopotamia as part of a general trend towards the formation of some of the world's first states and cities. However, the discovery of burials in the upper reaches of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers 'complicates this view in many ways', researchers say. 'The new picture is decidedly more complex and suggests that a linear trajectory from 'small-scale egalitarian' to 'large-scale stratified' societies may simply not exist there,' scientists write. Researchers found that the burial was the case of adolescent females, mostly between 12 and 16 years of age, brought together from different groups to carry out an extreme ritual. 'All the bodies associated with this grand burial rite were clothed in elaborate costumes, decorated with non-local materials, of which only the associated beadwork and fragments of textile survive, along with metal fastening pins, some of which reached outsized proportions for a human wearer,' scientists wrote. Previously, such a burial would have been considered to be the case of a young royal likely buried with their sacrificed attendants based on the idea that the king was at the top of the social hierarchy, researchers say. But new evidence that the teenagers were not biologically related to each other suggests they were brought from different areas as they belonged to the same 'age set'. Scientists suspect the sacrifice of this "age set" may represent a ritual initiation into a cult that was figuring novel political arrangements leading to later dynasties. With this hypothesis and other evidence found at the site, the study suggests the early society switched routinely between egalitarian and hierarchical kingships, 'often on a seasonal basis'.

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