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Rock art practice in Southeast Asia came from Africa

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Press Trust of India Melbourne
Modern humans brought the practice of making semi-permanent images in rocky landscapes to Europe and Asia from Africa, scientists say.

Latest research on the oldest surviving rock art of Southeast Asia shows that the region's first people, hunter-gatherers who arrived over 50,000 years ago, brought with them a rich art practice, researchers from Griffith University in Australia said.

The research showed that these earliest people skilfully produced paintings of animals in rock shelters from southwest China to Indonesia. Besides these countries, early sites were also recorded in Thailand, Cambodia and Malaysia.

Griffith University Chair in Rock Art Professor Paul Tacon led the research which involved field work with collaborative international teams in rugged locations of several countries.
 

The oldest paintings were identified by analysing overlapping superimpostions of art in various styles as well as numerical dating. It was found that the oldest art mainly consists of naturalistic images of wild animals and, in some locations, hand stencils.

The research showed that 35,000-40,000 year old dates for some rock art in Sulawesi, Indonesia announced in October by Griffith University Senior Research Fellow Maxime Aubert is not an anomaly. Instead, the practice was widespread across the region.

"As with the early art of Europe, the oldest Southeast Asian images often incorporated or were placed in relation to natural features of rock surfaces," Tacon said.

"This shows a purposeful engagement with the new places early peoples arrived in for both symbolic and practical reasons.

"Essentially, they humanised landscapes wherever they went, transforming them from wild places to cultural landscapes. This was the beginning of a process that continues to this day," Tacon added.

But unlike in Europe, the oldest surviving rock art of Southeast Asia is more often found in rock shelters rather than deep caves, suggesting experiences in deep caves cannot have been their inspiration as has long been argued for Europe.

"The research supports the idea suggested by the early Indonesian rock art dates that modern humans brought the practice of making semi-permanent images in rocky landscapes to Europe and Asia from Africa," Tacon said.

The study was published in the archaeological journal Antiquity.

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First Published: Nov 30 2014 | 6:00 PM IST

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