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Evidence of a 25,000-year-old pictograph in Northern Australia

✍ Scribed by Alan Watchman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
557 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0883-6353

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✦ Synopsis


Carbon-bearing substances (charcoal and oxalate minerals) contained in rock surface mineral accretions obscuring pictographs (rock paintings) provide an indirect way of radiocarbon dating the rock art. This article describes the chronological sequence of mineralogical laminations in rock crusts at an Aboriginal site in northern Australia and establishes conformable relationships between distinct compositional bands and past evidence of rock painting. Carbon in the mineral whewellite (CaC204.H20), in a layer stratigraphically equivalent to evidence of an hematite paint, was dated by accelerator mass spectrometry I4C at 24,600 2 220 years B.P. (NZA-2559), making this one of the oldest known pictographs in the world. Implications for the archaeology of Australia are briefly discussed.


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