Cape Times

Carvings could be 7 000 to 8 000 years old

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LIFE-SIZED carvings of camels and horses hewn into rock faces in Saudi Arabia could be 7 000 to 8 000 years old, finds new research that suggests they are much older than previously thought.

The 21 reliefs are heavily eroded and were estimated in 2018 to be about 2 000 years old, based on similariti­es with artworks found in Petra in Jordan.

But the new research by Saudi and European institutio­ns used various methods, including analysing tool marks, erosion patterns, and X-ray technology.

This would mean the area of carvings, known as the Camel Site, “is likely home to the oldest surviving large-scale (naturalist­ic) animal reliefs in the world”, the study said.

In the era it was created, the region would have looked very different from the arid landscape of today, with a savannah-like grassland dotted with lakes and trees, where wild camels roamed and were hunted.

The authors said in a press release issued by the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History: “We can now link the Camel Site to a period in pre-history when the pastoral population­s of northern Arabia created rock art and built large stone structures called mustatil. The Camel Site is therefore part of a wider pattern of activity, when groups frequently came together to establish and mark symbolic places.”

The research, published in the Journal of Archaeolog­ical Science this week, was carried out by the Saudi Ministry of Culture, the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, France’s CNRS research institutes, and the King Saud University.

The team included a stone mason, who estimated that each relief would have taken up to 15 days of carving to complete.

The authors, who said the reliefs were part of a wider culture of rock art in the region depicting life-sized animals, suggest the works could have been a communal effort that could have been part of an annual gathering of a Neolithic group. They said references to the mating season in the sculptures could mean they were symbolical­ly linked to the annual cycles of wet and dry seasons.

Given the extensive erosion of the carvings, the researcher­s said efforts to secure the site were urgent.

Lead author, Maria Guagnin, of the Max Planck Institute, said time was running out on the preservati­on of the Camel Site and on the potential identifica­tion of other relief sites.

 ?? | AFP ?? THE camel carvings have been heavily eroded.
| AFP THE camel carvings have been heavily eroded.

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