99188038
99188038
99188038
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The Archaeology of
Rock-Art
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Contents
List of Wgures
List of tables
List of contributors
Note on dates
Acknowledgements
The speared bighorn sheep
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Contents
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Contents
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Contents
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Index
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Figures
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.8
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.8
4.9
4.10
4.11
4.12
4.13
4.14
4.15
4.16
4.17
4.18
4.19
4.20
4.21
4.22
4.23
4.24
4.25
4.26
4.27
4.28
4.29
4.30
4.31
4.32
4.33
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
5.6
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List of Wgures
5.7
5.8
5.9
6.1
6.2
6.3
6.4
7.1
7.2
7.3
7.4
7.5
7.6
7.7
7.8
7.9
8.1
8.2
8.3
8.4
8.5
8.6
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
9.6
9.7
9.8
10.1
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
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Human Wgures
Rain-creature
Rain-creature
Western Arnhem Land
Later Arnhem Land rock-art
Later Arnhem Land rock-art
Earlier Arnhem Land rock-art: Dynamic
Figure group
Location of the Three Cs
Cosquer Cave: black hand stencils
Cosquer Cave: bison
Cosquer Cave: bison
Chauvet Cave: aurochs, horses and rhinos
Chauvet Cave: lion and three horses
Chauvet Cave: rhinos
Chauvet Cave: rhino with its ears in the
typical Chauvet fashion
Foz Coa: pecked and engraved animals
Regions of Atlantic Europe
Open-air rock-carving and decorated cist
slabs
Liro, Galicia: open-air rock-carving and
metal hoard
Open-air carvings and decorated stones
Weapon and other carvings
Distribution of weapon carvings in Galicia
Rock-art distribution in mid Norway
The Brandskog ship from Uppland, Sweden,
and ways of drawing this boat type
Proposed phase seqences for Northern
and Southern rock-art
Heights of rock-art localities in the Stjrdal
area
Heights of rock-art localities in the Stjrdal
area and land uplift
The Tnsasen ridge in Stjrdal
Distribution of ST rock-art sites in
Stjrdal
Hegre VI
PaciWc islands
Sequence of PaciWc island settlement as
described by Kirch
Structural systems used to explore variation
in geometrics
Geometric primary shapes
Correspondence between anthropomorphs
Anthropomorphs: correspondence between
variables
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10.7
10.8
10.9
10.10
10.11
10.12
10.13
10.14
10.15
10.16
10.17
10.18
10.19
10.20
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10.21
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10.22
11.1
11.2
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11.3
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11.5
11.6
11.7
11.8
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11.13
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List of Wgures
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List of Wgures
19.6
19.7
19.8
19.9
19.10
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Compass roses
Taking a bearing
Globe on stand
Head with hat
Woman
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342
19.11
19.12
19.13
19.14
19.15
Queen Victoria
Fish
Aboriginal engraving: Wsh
Horse
Engraved letters
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344
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Tables
xv
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An archaeology of rock-art
Fig. 1.2. George Chaloupka, Spirits in the Land, oil on canvas, 1972.
This book is about the archaeology of rock-art, so other aspects to the images are not developed. Here is a picture inspired by rock-art
to stand for what is missing.
George Chaloupka, the senior researcher on Australian rock-art, is himself an artist. He painted this image at a time when Arnhem
Land was being presented as a desert, which deserved development if that was Wnancially advantageous, and otherwise had no merit. In
its subject and its manner of depiction, Chaloupka was inspired by the rock-art images, especially those which had been painted not
many years before by Najolbombi, last of the famous rock-painters, in western Arnhem Land. This is one of about twenty paintings that
were exhibited in Canberra and largely sold there. The last of those left over from the exhibition, it survived the destruction of
Chaloupkas home in Darwin by Cyclone Tracy in 1977. The whereabouts of those sold in 1972 is not known.
We mention these details to illustrate again, and in another context how particular can be the reasons for which images are created,
and how capricious can be their survival and our access to knowledge of them.
Reproduced by permission of the artist.
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Fig. 1.3. Eric Gill, Crocodile, carved into exterior brick wall,
Mond Laboratory, Free School Lane, Cambridge, 19301.
Rock-engravings are rare in the artiWcial landscapes of the
worlds contemporary cities. This is in a built surface of brick,
Wttingly a synthetic rock, as it is in a humanly created city-scape.
The celebrated engraver and illustrator carved the image, about
1.8 metres high, to a subject chosen by the Russian physicist Peter
Kapitsa. It is Russian in its symbolism: the crocodile as the great
unknown in created things. (There are crocodiles of two types,
freshwater and saltwater, in Roger Yilaramas bark-painting, Fig.
1.1: in his Australian country, the two beasts are vital creatures,
important in the land and in the stories not alien curiosities in
the zoological garden!) Gills own comment on his image of the
crocodile reWned by visits to London Zoo to see and draw the
real creatures was, What should we know of reptiles who only
reptiles know? (MacCarthy 1989: 273).
The Mond Building now houses the Cambridge University
collection of air photographs, a unit within the University much
concerned with archaeology. StaV there think of their crocodile as
a Werce beast that stands guardian at the door to their precious
archive.
We mention these details to illustrate yet again, and in yet
another context how the meanings of images are varied and
shifting.
Photograph by Christopher Chippindale.
methods and many frames of ideas translate uncertainly into the diVerent language of pictures on the
rocks. Researchers use an eclectic mix of approaches,
some of them new (if any approach in twentiethcentury research can wholly be called new), some of
them borrowed (and adapted in or after the borrowing to the circumstance of studying rock-art).
In Valcamonica as in other parts of the world
the tradition of marking the rocks tellingly stops as
its sheltered communities were overwhelmed by an
outside world of commanding people whose culture
was a literate one of reading and writing (Anati
1976: 1536): for those communities, the swallowing power of the growing Roman Empire. In a great
many regions, it was the Wrst Xeets of the European
expansion and their landing passengers who closed
down the world in which the rock-art had been
made; the regions are not numerous where we have
good ethnohistorical accounts of the rock-painters
and very few where the painting traditions are still
strong (for one, western Arnhem Land, see e.g.
Chaloupka 1993; West 1995). The worlds of texts
and the world of written words are diVerent in
fundamental ways, as Sven Ouzman, Towards a mindscape of landscape: rock-art as expression of world-understanding, shows in Chapter 3. Even the rock-arts of
our culture in our own day among which one
should include the inscriptions monumentally engraved into and the graYti sprayed on to the artiWcial rock surfaces of buildings in our urban landscapes often oVer words alongside or instead of
pictures (Figs. 1.3, 1.4).
Inasmuch as rock-art is rather an archaeological
subject apart, so will the methods of its study be set
rather apart. Many of them will have novelty. Since
no settled or standard approach has emerged Whitley (in press) will be the Wrst general handbook on
the archaeological study of rock-art to be published
this is the time to explore the diversity of fruitful
approaches, and to recognise their unities. Rock-art
has been a subject-matter of archaeology for centuries, at least in Scandinavia yet the title of this
book, The archaeology of rock-art, seems not to have
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An archaeology of rock-art
Fig. 1.4. Artist unknown, graYti piece, spray-paint on brick bridge abutment, Cambridge (Long Road railway bridge, old Bedford line
archway), c. 1995.
Images oYcially set on walls in the contemporary urban environment are primarily directional signs, in words alone, or in words
treated with graphic care, sometimes in pictures alone: This is the way out, This is the way to the aeroplane. Distinctive rockpaintings on artiWcial hard-rock surfaces of our own culture include the spray-painted graYti, said to have originated in New York in the
1970s (Castleman 1982; Cooper and Chalfant 1984), then seen in cities across the world (Stahl 1990).
Individual graYti artists declare their identity with small tags contrived from their initials or nicknames. Often they make a piece, a
large and ambitious composition; the word piece derives from masterpiece and echoes the original meaning of that word, as denoting
the grand project with which an apprentice craftsman proves his skill and is thereby made a master.
Imagery in pieces has many forms. Often central, as in this piece, is an elaborated polychrome geometrical form, again a kind of
lettering nicknames, initials, or favoured word treated with such graphic force that the letters are barely or not recognised. We Wnd it
striking, and telling of late twentieth-century values, that spray-graYti artists the famous marginals who make a special iconography in
our society nevertheless make their graphics on the model of those words which deWne the power of the controlling literates against
them.
We mention these details to illustrate yet again, and in yet another context how varied can be the ways in which images derive
from a society, and relate to its values.
Artist unknown, therefore reproduced without permission of the artist. Photograph by Christopher Chippindale.
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Dating
Chronology has always been important to rock-art
studies, and remains generally diYcult.
Carbon is present usually in minute traces only, and
it is generally supposed rather than known that the
carbon event which will be measured by radiocarbon
is actually to be equated reliably with the art event,
the subject of study for which we would like a date.
Accordingly carbon dating of rock-art is a new Weld of
endeavour, made possible only by the AMS radiocarbon method with its scanty sample size, and still at an
experimental stage (Nelson 1993). The disputes of
19956 over the age of the Foz Coa petroglyphs
engravings, for which dates are argued that run from
the later Palaeolithic (Zilhao 1995) to the eighteenth
century or later of our own era (Bednarik 1995),
shows how large the uncertainties can be.
Dating is here addressed by Jean Clottes, The
Three Cs: fresh avenues towards European Palaeolithic
art, Chapter 7. The material available from the European Palaeolithic often charcoal safely preserved in
deep and still caves, is far more satisfactory for
trustworthy carbon-dating than are the materials of
such exposed surface imagery as Jo McDonald studies in Shelter rock-art in the Sydney Basin a spacetime
continuum: exploring diVerent inXuences on change, Chapter 18. Our own Chapter 6, Christopher Chippindale and Paul S. C. Tacon The many ways of dating
Arnhem Land rock-art, north Australia, takes dating as
its central theme, for a region with exceptional and
fortunate opportunities for varied dating methods.
Informed methods
By informed methods we mean those that depend on
some source of insight passed on directly or indirectly
from those who made and used the rock-art through
ethnography, through ethnohistory, through the historical record, or through modern understanding
known with good cause to perpetuate ancient knowledge; then, one can hope to explore the pictures from
the inside, as it were. In Arnhem Land, for instance,
the recent rock-painting tradition continues in Wne
paintings on bark and paper, full of layered and
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An archaeology of rock-art
intricate meaning (Fig. 1.1); so the image of a crocodile in Thompson Nganjmirras painting Crocodile
Dreaming (1992) relates not to a mere beast, but to the
Wrst Crocodile Ancestor, who was a man before he
turned into a crocodile with large jaws and gnawed
through the Liverpool Ranges to see what lay beyond
(Dyer 1994: 54). The hybrid creature in another of
the same artists paintings, with snake body and
crocodile head, we know to represent the Rainbow
Serpent, one of the creator-beings who in the founding days passed through the country, making its
water-holes and creeks, Wlling it with creatures, and
peopling it with its several clans, each in its proper
place in the land. And we know there is not just one
Rainbow Serpent, for in the Dreamtime Yingarna, the
Mother Rainbow Serpent, grew two eggs in her body
and gave birth to a son, Ngalyod, and a daughter,
Ngalkunburriyaymi (Taylor 1990: 330). By their
common traits we both Aboriginal Arnhem Landers
and western researchers who have been give that
knowledge can recognise late Rainbow Serpents in
the rock-art, and then trace this distinctive subject
back in the long dated sequence. In this way, we come
to see how the Rainbow Serpent starts as a motif in
Arnhem Land rock-art when the rising sea-level of the
post-glacial brings the ocean across settled land; and
an element in its founding ethnography is a creature of
the sea a pipeWsh rather than a land snake (Tacon,
Wilson and Chippindale 1996).
Importantly, because iconographic meanings seem
to be variable and historically idiosyncratic rather
than standardised and accessible by some generalising rules in an anthropology of art that ethnographic insight into an informed knowledge is essential to that kind of understanding. Without it, one
might suppose this snaky creature, because of its nonnatural combination of limbs and traits, might not be
of the everyday, mundane world but one would not
know just what it stood for, with just what meaning
and just what power. The crocodile as a picture,
because natural in its traits, one could think is wholly a
subject from the natural world; nothing in the image
itself tells the ignorant outsider that it is not only a
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from their relations to each other and to the landscape, or by relation to whatever archaeological context is available. This includes inference by location
in landscape (Richard Bradley, Daggers drawn: depictions of Bronze Age weapons in Atlantic Europe, Chapter
8; Sven Ouzman, Towards a mindscape of landscape:
rock-art as expression of world-understanding, Chapter
3), the Wguring out of what a picture shows by the
geometry of its shape (Benjamin Smith, The tale of the
chameleon and the platypus: limited and likely choices in
making pictures, Chapter 12), inference from a mathematical measure of information content and from
site location (Ralph Hartley and Anne M. Wolly
Vawser, Spatial behaviour and learning in the prehistoric
environment of the Colorado River drainage (south-eastern
Utah), western North America, Chapter 11), and the
relationship of similar but widely separated forms
through the use of multivariate analyses (Meredith
Wilson, PaciWc rock-art and cultural genesis: a multivariate exploration, Chapter 10) or by other techniques.
Even where there is informed knowledge, the
formal methods can be useful, just as one can study
the geometry of pictures from any cultural context as
an interest separate from their meaning, or as one can
usefully Wnd kinds of modern understanding in aspects of paintings in the western tradition which in
their own time were not a concern (see, e.g., Carrier
1991).
Analogy
Finally, analogy relates to, but does not duplicate, the
formal methods: when we cannot observe x but we
can y, which is suYciently like it, we can hope to
infer things about x based on observations of y.
Aspects are necessarily particular to the distinctive
nature of rock-art as a class of archaeological materials, but the issues of method that arise are the
diYcult and well-known ones that concern archaeological reasoning by analogy in general.
The studies in this book, and the books
structure
Some of this books authors can say little or nothing
8
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An archaeology of rock-art
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Davidson, I. and W. Noble. 1989. The archaeology of
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MacCarthy, F. 1989. The life of Eric Gill. London, Faber.
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Nelson, D. E. 1993. Second thoughts on a rock-art date,
10