http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/02/110211095557.htm
Sunday, May 6, 2012
PETROGLYPHS DISCOVERED IN EAST TIMOR:
Face petroglyph, Lena Hara cave, East Timor, Indonesia.
Photograph: ScienceDaily.
An article in ScienceDaily, dated February. 11, 2011, announced
the discovery of ancient petroglyphs in a cave in the eastern portion of the
island of Timor in Indonesia.
“Ancient stone faces carved into the walls of
a well-known limestone cave in East Timor have been discovered by a team
searching for fossils of extinct giant rats. The team of archaeologists and
palaeontologists were working in Lene Hara Cave on the northeast tip of East
Timor. – “‘Looking up from the cave floor at a colleague sitting on a ledge, my
head torch shone on what seemed to be a weathered carving, CSIRO's ( The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) is Australia's national science agency) Dr Ken Aplin
said. - I shone the torch around and saw a whole panel of engraved prehistoric
human faces on the wall of the cave. - The local landowners with whom we were
working were stunned by the findings. They said the faces had chosen that day
to reveal themselves because they were pleased by the field work we were
doing.’”
The Lene Hara carvings, or
petroglyphs, are frontal, stylised faces each with eyes, a nose and a mouth.
One has a circular headdress with rays that frame the face. Uranium isotope
dating by colleagues at the University of Queensland revealed the 'sun ray'
face to be around 10,000 to 12,000 years old, placing it in the late
Pleistocene. The other faces could not be dated but are likely to be equally
ancient. Lene Hara cave has been visited by archaeologists and rock art
specialists since the early 1960s to study its rock paintings, which include
hand stencils, boats, animals, human figures and linear decorative motifs. The
age of the pigment art in Lene Hara is currently unknown but a fragment of
limestone with traces of embedded red ochre was dated previously by Professor
Sue O'Connor of The Australian National University to over 30,000 years ago.
Although stylised engravings
of faces occur throughout Melanesia, Australia and the Pacific, the Lene Hara
petroglyphs are the only examples that have been dated to the Pleistocene. No
other petroglyphs of faces are known to exist anywhere on the island of Timor. Recording
and dating the rock art of Timor should be a priority for future research,
because of its cultural significance and value in understanding the development
of art in our past," Professor O'Connor said.”
Coincidentally,
the island of Timor is essentially just next door to the Indonesian island of
Flores where the remains of miniature humans (referred to as the Flores
Hobbits) were found. I am not suggesting any connection between those people
and the East Timor petroglyphs, except that they are both in an area that has
not been extensively studied by science. Isn’t it exciting and wonderful that
these discoveries can still be made?
REFERENCE:http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/02/110211095557.htm
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