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Lumpy flint figurines may be some of the earliest depictions of real people


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Lumpy flint figurines may be some of the earliest depictions of real people

Archaeologists now think the Neolithic flint artifacts found at Kharaysin in Jordan are the earliest-known portrayals of real human beings in the Near East.
Archaeologists now think the Neolithic flint artifacts found at Kharaysin in Jordan are the earliest-known portrayals of real human beings in the Near East.
 
(Image: © Ibáñez et al/Kharaysin archaeological team/Antiquity Publications Ltd)
 

Archaeologists at an ancient burial site in Jordan thought one of their team might have sunstroke when he suggested some rough flints he'd found

 

could represent people. But now his discovery could change how scientists think about the Neolithic Near East.

 

More than 100 of the unusual flint artifacts dating back to about 7500 B.C. have been discovered at Kharaysin, an archaeological site a few miles

 

northeast of Amman in Jordan. 

The archaeologists who found them now think the artifacts may be early depictions of real people and may have been used for ancestor worship. They

 

also think the figurines could shed light on why portrayals of humans became widespread in the Near East from about 1,000 years earlier. However,

 

experts contacted by Live Science were not entirely convinced that the lumpy stone artifacts were used in ancestor worship rituals, though they don't

 

think it's out of the question.

 

After one of the team digging at Kharaysin unearthed several of the flint artifacts, each about 2 inches (5 centimeters) long, he proposed they showed

 

rough human figures — with a projecting head flanked by two notches on each side that could represent the tops of shoulders and hips.

 

His idea was first met with skeptical smiles, said archaeologist Juan Ibáñez of Barcelona's Milà y Fontanals Institution of the Spanish National Research

 

Council.

 

 

"The team reacted … with jokes about how much sun he had received on his head," Ibáñez said.

 

But as the team found more of the strangely shaped flints, they started to take the idea seriously.

 

 

"We acknowledged that they were something consistent and previously unknown," Ibáñez told Live Science in an email.

 

Strange figurines

 

Statistical analysis of the flints show they have the same "violin" shape as Neolithic human sculptures from the same region, such as this statue from 'Ain Ghazal in Jordan.

Statistical analysis of the flints show they have the same "violin" shape as Neolithic human sculptures from the same region, such as this

 

statue from 'Ain Ghazal in Jordan. (Image credit: Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg), CC BY-SA 4.0)

 

In a paper published July 6 in the journal Antiquity, Ibáñez and his team describe how they came to see the flints as individual portrayals of

 

specific people, despite their rough appearance.

 

Research shows the distinctive "violin" shape of the strange artifacts is similar to the shapes of Neolithic Near East sculptures that

 

unmistakably portray people.

 

 

The team statistically compared the dimensions of the Kharaysin flints to those of human sculptures unearthed at 'Ain Ghazal, a Neolithic

 

archaeological site a few miles away, and found they had a similar violin shape.

 

 

"The more skeptical archaeologists in our team had to accept that, most probably, they were [human] figurines," Ibáñez said.

 

The Neolithic community at Kharaysin used flint extensively for making stone tools, including cutting blades and scrapers. The two notches

 

the archaeologists have interpreted as shoulders and hips could arguably have been notches used to bind the flints onto a haft. In that

 

scenario, the flints could have been used as a weapon or tool. However, the flint artifacts had no edges that could be used for cutting, and

 

there were no signs of wear, suggesting they were never used as tools.

 

J9eWQvJtLwDB4Bo8fbuSvb-650-80.jpg.webp

 

 

In addition, the archaeologists found the strange flints mostly in the funerary area of the site where human burials took place, Ibáñez said.

 

 

Excavations show many of the tombs were opened after a burial, and some parts were removed — often the heads and the long bones

 

from limbs. People then used the bones in rituals, before depositing them in pits at the cemetery, he said. Offerings such as stone bowls,

 

knives and other tools were also deposited at the same time.

 

"We think that the figurines were part of this ritual paraphernalia," Ibáñez said. "They were probably made and used during rituals of

 

remembering the

 

Neolithic changes

S3H7THjkrscsRKTK2BS26Y-650-80.jpg.webp

The Neolithic community at Kharaysin sometimes reopened the tombs of their dead to remove the heads and long bones, presumably for

 

rituals. (Image credit: Ibáñez et al/Kharaysin archaeological team/Antiquity Publications Ltd)

 

Although portrayals of animals were common until the early Neolithic period, Ibáñez said, portrayals of people only became widespread

 

after about 8500 B.C. — and the Kharaysin figurines might explain why.

 

 

If the figurines were evidence of ancestor worship rituals, a rise in ancestor worship throughout the region might explain the increasing

 

frequency of human portrayals, he said.

 

 

Paleolithic hunter-gatherers created some earlier human portrayals — the so-called "Venus" figurines, for example, from up to 40,000

 

years ago — but they were fertility symbols that did not represent real people, he said. "Our Neolithic figurines are related to a cult of the

 

deceased." 

 

e6H2NNsj5e8f8YhbVCDJyW-650-80.jpg.webp

 

he relationship between living people and their ancestors would have been important in the first farming communities of the Neolithic

 

period, where social groups were rooted in specific territories, he said.

 
 

Some other archaeologists who were not involved in the Kharaysin research, however, are cautious.

 

pJnWM95C72Nrdbnq7iSwMa-650-80.jpg.webp

 

Karina Croucher of the University of Bradford in the United Kingdom, who has studied Neolithic burials elsewhere in Jordan, said she

 

accepted the flint artifacts were meant to be human figurines. But she said the funerary practices might represent an attempt to "keep the

 

dead close," rather than being a form of ancestor worship.

 

aNKQh463unii2HZ6mGqXyV-650-80.jpg.webp

 

Alan Simmons of the University of Nevada, who led the excavations of many of the Neolithic sculptures at 'Ain Ghazal, said the

 

interpretation of the flints as human figurines was "not unreasonable."

 

However, "the suggestion that these 'figurines' may have been used to remember deceased individuals is open to other interpretations,"

 

Simmons told Live Science.

 

"Perhaps, these were tokens, gaming pieces or even 'fetishes' as seen in North American Zuni contexts," he said. But "there is no doubt

 

that this discovery adds more depth to the complexity of Neolithic life."

 

 

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