Saturday, November 17, 2007

Pre-Maya Cave Paintings in the Yucatan

Mexico City, Nov 15 - Mexican anthropologists have discovered some 5,000-year-old cave paintings predating the Maya civilisation on Yucatan peninsula, Spanish news agency EFE reported.

According to Carlos Augusto of the Faculty of Anthropological Sciences at the Autonomous University of the Yucatan, they found some 60 paintings of man-like figures at the Kab cavern situated near the famous Chichen Itza archaeological site. There are also drawings of animal figures, birds or canines, Augusto said.

Anthropologists attribute them to the pre-Maya epoch, between 5,000 and 7,000 years ago.

Augusto also noted that there are also Mayan 'Ajau' symbols and pottery in the cave from the classical period of that civilisation showing that the cave was occupied at various times over the course of human history.

There are also drawings of crosses that suggest that it was occupied during the epoch of the Spanish conquest, he added.

The cave, made up of tunnels between three and five kilometres long, is a virtual labyrinth eight metres below ground.

He said that the cave 'shows the existence of symbolic thinking in Mesoamerica, when the human groups were still hunters and gatherers', something that he said was of 'extraordinary importance'.


Share/Bookmark

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The comment about crosses indicating a period after the Spanish Conquest is probably flawed as the cross has been in use by Native Americans prior to the Coming of Jesus let alone the coming of Christian Europeans.