VERO BEACH, FL – Researchers from the Smithsonian
Institution and the University of Florida have announced the discovery of a bone
fragment, approximately 13,000 years old, in Florida with an incised image of a
mammoth or mastodon. This engraving is the oldest and only known example of Ice
Age art to depict a proboscidean (the order of animals with trunks) in the
Americas.
The bone was discovered in Vero Beach, Florida by James Kennedy, an
avocational fossil hunter, who collected the bone and later while cleaning the
bone, discovered the engraving. Recognizing its potential importance, Kennedy
contacted scientists at the University of Florida and the Smithsonian's Museum
Conservation Institute and National Museum of Natural History.
"This is an incredibly exciting discovery," said Dennis Stanford,
anthropologist at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History and
co-author of this research. "There are hundreds of depictions of proboscideans
on cave walls and carved into bones in Europe, but none from America—until
now."
The engraving is 3 inches long from the top of the head to the tip of the
tail, and 1.75 inches tall from the top of the head to the bottom of the right
foreleg. The fossil bone is a fragment from a long bone of a large mammal—most
likely either a mammoth or mastodon, or less likely a giant sloth. A precise
identification was not possible because of the bone’s fragented condition and
lack of diagnostic features.
"The results of this investigation are an excellent example of the value of
interdisciplinary research and cooperation among scientists," said Barbara
Purdy, professor emerita of anthropology at the University of Florida and lead
author of the team's research. "There was considerable skepticism expressed
about the authenticity of the incising on the bone until it was examined
exhaustively by archaeologists, paleontologists, forensic anthropologists,
materials science engineers and artists."
One of the main goals for the research team was to investigate the timing of
the engraving—was it ancient or was it recently engraved to mimic an example of
prehistoric art? It was originally found near a location, known as the Old Vero
Site, where human bones were found side-by-side with the bones of extinct Ice
Age animals in an excavation from 1913 to 1916. The team examined the elemental
composition of the engraved bone and others from the Old Vero Site. They also
used optical and electron microscopy, which showed no discontinuity in
coloration between the carved grooves and the surrounding material. This
indicated that both surfaces aged simultaneously and that the edges of the
carving were worn and showed no signs of being carved recently or that the
grooves were made with metal tools.
Believed to be genuine, this rare specimen provides evidence that people
living in the Americas during the last Ice Age created artistic images of the
animals they hunted.
The engraving is at least 13,000 years old as this is the date for the last
appearance of these animals in eastern North America, and more recent
Pre-Columbian people would not have seen a mammoth or mastodon to draw.
The team's research also further validates the findings of geologist Elias
Howard Sellards at the Old Vero Site in the early 20th Century. His claims that
people were in North America and hunted animals at Vero Beach during the last
Ice Age have been disputed over the past 95 years.
A cast of the carved fossil bone is now part of an exhibit of Florida Mammoth
and Mastodons at the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville.
*http://yourvalleytimes.com/news/ice_age_art
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