Le figure incise del Pleistocene finale-inizio Olocene in Valcamonica
International audience Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Carved Figures In Valcamonica-Valcamonica is a glacial alpine valley in northern Italy and has one of the biggest prehistoric open air rock art concentrations of Europe. Its long and uninterrupted rock art production is rooted in the late Pleist...
Main Authors: | , |
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Other Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | Italian |
Published: |
HAL CCSD
2023
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hal.science/hal-04350551 https://hal.science/hal-04350551/document https://hal.science/hal-04350551/file/23_05_SIGARI_FOSSATI.pdf https://doi.org/10.32097/1215 |
Summary: | International audience Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Carved Figures In Valcamonica-Valcamonica is a glacial alpine valley in northern Italy and has one of the biggest prehistoric open air rock art concentrations of Europe. Its long and uninterrupted rock art production is rooted in the late Pleistocene-early Holocene, showing strong links with the Palaeolithic art tradition. All the known figures belonging to this phase are located in the Luine hill in Darfo-Boario Terme, in the lower valley, and they are all concentrated into two rocks: Rock No. 6 and Rock No. 34. Sixty years after their discovery, a new systematic research was undertaken producing an updated documentation of the most ancient figures. These recording and analysis activities led to significantly update the number of the known figures, up to 15, recognising a variety of figurative categories, including deer (2), elk (9), fish (2), caprid (1) and abstract motifs (1). So, Luine hill has also the richest concentration of elk figures of the Late Pleistocene of Europe known so far, offering an important insight into a disappeared landscape too. Indeed, the presence of this animal suggests the presence of open humid areas, rich in water, that probably developed after the Last Glacial Maximum, as confirmed by the faunal remains found in few other sites of northern Italy and by the few available palaeoclimatic data. Moreover, the presence of the elk in the graphic repertoire provides a key chrono-cultural reference, suggesting links with more sites both in Italy and in Europe, where elk representations were discovered on portable objects or on cave walls. The new rock art recording led even to clarify the used techniques to make the graphic units; define the relative chronology of the rock art palimpsests, recognising two graphic phases at least for the most ancient artistic production of Valcamonica whose maximum age can be established around c. 17.000 years BP; fix the rock art evidence in the wide archaeological scenario of both the Alpine and ... |
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