Australian Scientists Find Kangaroo Rock Art Estimated Over 17,300 Years Old – Study
Canberra – Australian researchers uncovered the country’s oldest rock art depicting a kangaroo believed to date back over 17,000 years.
Found in the sparsely populated Kimberley region of Western Australia, the 1.8 meter kangaroo was painted at the upside of a rock shelter.
Using radiocarbon dating of a mud wasp underneath and on top of the painting, scientists from the University of Western Australia estimated the painting to be around 17,300 years old with some degree of certainty. This makes the prehistoric artwork the oldest discovered in Australia.
The study, published in the Human Behavior publication of the seminal scientific journal Nature, also described how this innovative dating technique helped determine the ages of 16 motifs in the region.
Drawings of human figures, snakes and mystical creatures were all estimated to be between 13,000 and 17,000 years old.
University of Western Australia archeologist, Sven Ouzman, said that the paintings are similar to the cave paintings announced earlier this year in Indonesia’s Sulawesi island, suggesting a cultural link.