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The exact location of the 19th Unnamed Cave, somewhere on private land in northern Alabama, is a closely guarded secret. What’s inside is too precious to risk destruction. An 80-foot-wide, east-facing mouth leads to a long tunnel where the ceiling and floor draw closer and closer together. You can’t quite stand up, but you don’t need to crawl, says photographer Stephen Alvarez, founder of the Ancient Art Archive and co-author of a new paper on the cave. The floors are uneven. Big pools of water are scattered everywhere. When you’re a long way from the entrance but can still see some daylight, that’s where the artwork begins.
Hundreds of images are etched into mud across roughly 4,300 square feet of the cave’s ceiling. Abstract shapes and swirling lines appear alongside rattlesnakes, bears, insects, birds and humanlike figures created by Native American artists under the flickering light of river-cane torches sometime between 660 and 949 C.E. The artwork continues well into the cave’s dark zone, where visitors can only see a hand in front of their face with the assistance of artificial light. Fog sometimes forms in the cave’s cool, damp air; this wet environment helped the artwork survive for more than 1,000 years.
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
a reply to: putnam6
Why would more recent artwork lend credence to ancient cultures?
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
a reply to: putnam6
Why would more recent artwork lend credence to ancient cultures?
It's all in the article... did you read it?
originally posted by: putnam6
3-D Scans Reveal Gigantic Native American Cave Art in Alabama
New analysis identifies four life-size human figures and an 11-foot rattlesnake drawn on the ceiling of an unnamed cavern. When I read stories like this it certainly offers some credence to the native American Indian lore of much older cultures.
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: putnam6
3-D Scans Reveal Gigantic Native American Cave Art in Alabama
New analysis identifies four life-size human figures and an 11-foot rattlesnake drawn on the ceiling of an unnamed cavern. When I read stories like this it certainly offers some credence to the native American Indian lore of much older cultures.
Uhm... how old do you think that Native American cultures are?
The first Alabamians arrived 13,000 years ago
20,000 plus sounds about right in my basic knowledge, the native lore I was referring to is even older than that. Something like basically 7 life cycles from primitive to different advanced stages where we were knocked down to almost extinction and humans survived multiplied adapted etc. We are just finding 1000-year-old stuff, what happened that decimated all the much older relics and evidence of those native 'civilizations" Where those natives related to the western native peoples? So many unanswered questions.
Could have sworn not long ago there was a discovery in Africa going back further than we used to believe. So if you are following along how many years from primitive ape to today's human? 200,000-300,000
It's my understanding that this is the oldest evidence in this area, pretty sure they said this in the article.
(for those interested, archaeologists think the Native American presence in the Americas goes back to the last Ice Age, around 20,000 years ago -with some evidence that it might go back as far as 30,000 years.)
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: Byrd
Uhm... how old do you think that Native American cultures are?
The first Alabamians arrived 13,000 years ago
20,000 plus sounds about right in my basic knowledge, the native lore I was referring to is even older than that. Something like basically 7 life cycles from primitive to different advanced stages where we were knocked down to almost extinction and humans survived multiplied adapted etc.
We are just finding 1000-year-old stuff, what happened that decimated all the much older relics and evidence of those native 'civilizations" Where those natives related to the western native peoples? So many unanswered questions.
Could have sworn not long ago there was a discovery in Africa going back further than we used to believe. So if you are following along how many years from primitive ape to today's human? 200,000-300,000