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Judi Lynn

(160,530 posts)
Mon Mar 7, 2022, 08:24 PM Mar 2022

Controversial rock art may depict extinct giants of the ice age

Controversial rock art may depict extinct giants of the ice age

By Katie Hunt, CNNUpdated 3:11 PM ET, Mon March 7, 2022



(CNN)More than 12,000 years ago, South America was teeming with an astonishing array of ice age beasts -- giant ground sloths the size of a car, elephantine herbivores and a deerlike animal with an elongated snout.

These extinct giants are among many animals immortalized in an 8-mile-long (13-kilometer-long) frieze of rock paintings at Serranía de la Lindosa in the Colombian Amazon rainforest -- art created by some of the earliest humans to live in the region, according to a new study.

" (The paintings) have the whole diversity of Amazonia. Turtles and fishes to jaguars, monkeys and porcupines," said study author Jose Iriarte, a professor in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom.

Iriate calls the frieze, which likely would have been painted over centuries, if not millennia, "the last journey," as he said it represents the arrival of humans in South America -- the last region to be colonized by Homo sapiens as they spread around the world from Africa, their place of origin. These pioneers from the north would have faced unknown animals in an unfamiliar landscape.

More:
https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/07/americas/rock-art-colombia-scn/index.html

~ ~ ~

From September, 2021:

'Last Journey' offers clues to an ancient civilization
Lucy Sherriff, CNN • Updated 17th September 2021

(CNN) — For more than 12,500 years, one of the world's largest collections of prehistoric rock paintings lay undiscovered in Colombia's Amazonian rainforest.

Depicting now-extinct ice age animals, such as the elephant-like mastodon, stocky ice age horses and giant sloths, the drawings were painted by some of the first humans to ever reach the Amazon.

As groups of hunter-gatherers traversed the globe in search of food, shelter and land, they were confronted by the enormity -- and diversity -- of the Amazon Rainforest. Researchers have long been perplexed by the decision of early humans to settle in the Amazon basin, due to its harsh environmental conditions and seemingly inhospitable landscape.

The stunning rock art discovery was made in 2017 as part of an expedition named "Last Journey." Engineered by a British-Colombian archaeological team funded by the European Research Council, the art will take years to study.

More:
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/rock-art-serrania-la-lindosa-colombia-last-journey-scn/index.html

Many more images of these ancient figures at google images:
https://tinyurl.com/ym7sfn46

Also posted at Anthropology:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/12297860

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abqtommy

(14,118 posts)
1. Thanks, this is very interesting. A quick search came up with results that showed some
Mon Mar 7, 2022, 08:41 PM
Mar 2022

scientists believe the first humans populated South America 22,000 years ago while others
believe it was 33,000 years ago or even 50,000 years ago. It's good to keep an open mind about these dates.

https://colors-newyork.com/when-did-humans-reach-south-america/

https://www.archaeology.org/news/683-130320-south-america-migration-toca-da-tira-peia

Judi Lynn

(160,530 posts)
2. Absolutely mind-blowing images from Serra da Capivara National Park in Brazil, your 2nd link.
Tue Mar 8, 2022, 12:28 AM
Mar 2022

Google images:

https://tinyurl.com/5dr2mmda

Clearly there is so vastly much to learn ahead for the searchers willing to undertake it that the picture which will be forming ahead of us will be astonishing!

How could so much be overlooked, or even ignored all this time, of was it simply made "invisible" because it contradicts the conclusions reached already established long ago by earlier scientists? They should have been more humble, and accepted the fact they didn't and couldn't know everything already!

Thanks for your post.














abqtommy

(14,118 posts)
3. Thanks for this. It's always good to remember that True Science is always changing
Tue Mar 8, 2022, 12:33 AM
Mar 2022

and updating. Some of the info I found was new to me too.

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