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Judi Lynn

(162,784 posts)
1. Documenting the world's largest prehistoric rock art in South America - new study
Tue Jun 4, 2024, 09:24 PM
Jun 2024


Enhanced image of monumental rock art on Cerro Pintado, Venezuela. Philip Riris, Author provided

Published: June 4, 2024 12:17pm EDT

We weren’t the first to lay eyes on the engraving since it was carved into the hillside any number of centuries or millennia ago, not by a long shot. The Venezuelan archaeologist José Maria Cruxent even recorded it in his diaries in the 1940s – and there were certainly visitors before him.

The site of Cerro Pintado (Painted Hill), in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas, is a local landmark and a well-known fixture on the itinerary of those travelling on the Middle Orinoco River. Yet viewing the gigantic snake, carved high up on the hillside, immediately ignited both our sense of wonder and our scientific curiosity. Why a snake? Why did its creators climb a towering granite hill to place it there, just so? What about all the other engravings orbiting it – what do they mean?

All these questions and more swirled around our little group as we stood, sticky and mosquito-bitten, in the savanna at the foot of the hill. Its singular status made it all the more intriguing.

While there are other examples of giant prehistoric rock art in other parts of the world, these appear to be the largest. While, as mentioned, some were already known to archaeologists, our team documented others, including over the border in Colombia.

. . .



Telephoto shot of monumental rock art of snake tail in Colombia, humans for scale. Jose Oliver, Author provided (no reuse)

More:
https://theconversation.com/documenting-the-worlds-largest-prehistoric-rock-art-in-south-america-new-study-231401

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