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Stone Age Artists in Namibia Were Master Track-Makers

Their ancient carvings of human and animal tracks are so detailed that specialists can distinguish the species, sex and maturity of the creatures they were made to mimic.

BySam Walters
An assortment of human and animals footprints are carved into the cliffs of the Doro! Nawas Mountains in Central-Western Namibia. .Credit: Andreas Pastoors

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There’s a lot that can be done with a blank slab of stone. It can be scored, splattered with paint, or plastered with clay. Transformed with a smattering of scrapes or scratches or a smear of red ochre, its surface can become a swirl of abstract shapes or a field of frolicking antelopes. Ancient rock artists tried it all, becoming remarkably skilled at representing themselves and their surroundings in stone.

In the Later Stone Age of southern Africa between around 5,000 years and 1,000 years ago, for instance, ancient artists covered the surface of cliffs in modern-day Namibia with carvings of human and animal footprints.

According to a paper published in PLOS ONE, the carvings that still survive are so crisp and complex that they communicate all sorts of details about the creatures they were carved to represent, including their species, sex and maturity.

The paper testifies to the skill ...

  • Sam Walters

    Sam Walters is the associate editor at Discover Magazine who writes and edits articles covering topics like archaeology, paleontology, ecology, and evolution, and manages a few print magazine sections.

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