Deep in the heart of northern Syria, close to the banks of the Euphrates River, archaeologists have uncovered a series of startling 11,000-year-old wall paintings and artefacts. “The wall paintings date back to the 9th millennium BC. Apart from the organic artefacts, which have decomposed over time, the site has provided many well-preserved treasures. Carved stone tools, flints, seed-grinding implements and brick-grinding stones have been recovered.
Many bone objects were also found - both remnants of the animals that made up part of the daily diet and intricately fashioned tools. The dig also uncovered several figurines made of gypsum, chalk, bone and clay. The most recent discovery, an 11,000-year-old statue of a man is “particularly important and well preserved,” Coqueugniot said. This item will allow comparisons with other similar sculptures found on sites in the Urfa region of southern Turkey, added the French scientist, who has overseen archaeological projects at Dja’de for 15 years. “The figures could have had religious significance. The female statuettes could also have been fertility symbols. But they could have had entirely different ritual meanings,” Coqueugniot said. “We can only offer hypotheses,” he added. “It is still very difficult to say what was the significance of this 11,000-year-old statue of the woman.” The latest discoveries date back to the start of the Neolithic era, in a period known as the Epipalaeolithic. |