Showing posts with label Blombos Cave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blombos Cave. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2012

The World’s Oldest Paint Set

An article in the January/February 2012 issue of Archaeology magazine describes what are believed to be the world’s oldest known paint supplies, which appear to have been manufactured about 100,000 years ago in a production shop that may also be candidate for the "world’s oldest" factory.

Blombos Cave in South Africa has yielded a number of "world’s oldest" artifacts over the last many years, and the discovery of two abalone shells containing mineral residue and ochre should not surprise anyone familiar with excavations at the cave. The excavators also found what may have been primitive mortars and pestles used to grind the red and yellow ochre pigments, along with other tools that the owner may have used repeatedly over a period of time.

Red ochre, in particular, was used during that time as a part of early funeral practices when it was scattered over the corpse prior to burial. But the evidence found at Blombos Cave indicates that the ochre was used either for creating paintings, or possibly for body decoration, or both.

In Europe, no evidence for the manufacture and use of such "paints" exists much before 35,000 to 37,000 years BC, when the famous cave paintings in caves such as Lascaux and Chauvet were created. Were the people living in what is now southwestern South Africa that far ahead of those living elsewhere in the world 100,000 years ago?

Friday, January 6, 2012

The Oldest Beads Found So Far

How many ancient objects are lying forgotten or undiscovered in  dusty corners of modern museums?   The following story is a case in point. 

It seems that around 100,000 years ago, people living in what are now Israel and Algeria were already wearing jewelry made of tiny pierced shells.  Researchers rediscovered these ancient beads by combing through old museum collections at the Natural History Museum in London and in Paris at the Musee de l'Homme, where they had lain virtually untouched since the 1930s and 1940s.  So far the researchers have rediscovered three shell beads from two different sites. 

The shells belong to a Mediterranean species called Nessarius gibbosulus.  The beads were found so far inland that researchers believe they must have been intentionally brought there from the Mediterranean coast.  Did people bring these beads with them during migrations inland, or do they represent evidence of early trade between coastal peoples and those living farther inland? 

There is an interesting sidelight to this story.  The same researchers who discovered the Mediterranean shells also found a collection of shells discovered at the famous Blombos Cave in South Africa.  These beads, dated to about 75,000 years ago, are also made of Nessarius gibbosulus shells. 

More information about these beads can be found here