Neolithic Artwork Found in Northern Africa

News May 19, 2014

SHARE:
(Archaeological Mission in the Farafra Oasis)

CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND—A tourist has discovered Neolithic artwork in a shallow cave in the Egyptian Western Desert that supports the suggestion that ancient Egyptian culture drew on cultural influences from Africa as well as the Near East. Giulio Lucarini of Cambridge University and co-director of the Archaeological Mission in the Farafra Oasis examined the etchings last month. He thinks the images, including a giraffe, a cow-like mammal, two boats, and a human hand, could date to between 6000 and 5,500 B.C. The drawings resemble those from another site in the region known as Wadi el Obeiyid Cave, discovered in 1995. “Our work shows that people living in the Eastern Sahara had a significant and developed culture which fed into the development of the Pharaonic civilization and beyond,” Lucarini announced at the University of Cambridge

  • Features March/April 2014

    All Hands on Deck

    Inviting the world to explore a shipwreck deep in the Gulf of Mexico

    Read Article
    (Courtesy NOAA)
  • Features March/April 2014

    Messengers to the Gods

    During a turbulent period in ancient Egypt, common people turned to animal mummies to petition the gods, inspiring the rise of a massive religious industry

    Read Article
    Courtesy The Brooklyn Museum
  • Letter From Borneo March/April 2014

    The Landscape of Memory

    Archaeology, oral history, and culture deep in the Malaysian jungle

    Read Article
    (Jerry Redfern)
  • Artifacts March/April 2014

    Chimú-Inca Funerary Idols

    Read Article
    (Matthew Helmer)