Ice Age Lion Made Whole Again

Digs & Discoveries November/December 2014

SHARE:

One of the most famous works of Ice Age art has been given a new face. A lion sculpted from mammoth ivory about 40,000 years ago was found in the 1930s in Vogelherd Cave, one of the four caves in Germany’s Swabian Jura Mountains that has produced evidence of the world’s earliest art and music. The lion has long been thought to be a relief, unique in Paleolithic art, says archaeologist Nick Conard of the University of Tübingen. For the last decade, Conard has been reexamining both the cave and spoil heaps left by earlier archaeological efforts. Among that material, his team found a carved lion’s face they soon realized was the missing half of the famous figurine’s head. It’s now clear that the lion was not a relief but rather, like the caves’ other Ice Age figurines (“New Life for the Lion Man,” March/April 2012), a fully three-dimensional work.

  • Features November/December 2014

    The Neolithic Toolkit

    How experimental archaeology is showing that Europe's first farmers were also its first carpenters

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Rengert Elburg, Landesamt für Archäologie Sachsen)
  • Features November/December 2014

    The Ongoing Saga of Sutton Hoo

    A region long known as a burial place for Anglo-Saxon kings is now yielding a new look at the world they lived in

    Read Article
    (© The Trustees of the British Museum/Art Resource)
  • Letter From Montana November/December 2014

    The Buffalo Chasers

    Vast expanses of grassland near the Rocky Mountains bear evidence of an extraordinary ancient buffalo hunting culture

    Read Article
    (Maria Nieves Zedeño)
  • Artifacts November/December 2014

    Ancient Egyptian Ostracon

    Read Article
    (Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, UCL, UC15946)