First evidence of Pleistocene rock art in North Africa: securing the age of the Qurta petroglyphs (Egypt) through OSL dating
Authors
Huyge, Dirk
Vandenberghe, Dimitri A.G.
De Dapper, Morgan
Mees, Florias
Claes, Wouter
Darnell, John Coleman
Discipline
History and Archaeology
Subject
Rock art
Qurta
OSL dating
Audience
Scientific
Date
2011Publisher
Antiquity
Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
Long doubted, the existence of Pleistocene rock art in North Africa is here proven through the dating of petroglyph panels displaying aurochs and other animals at Qurta in the Upper Egyptian Nile Valley. The method used was optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) applied to deposits of wind-blown sediment covering the images. This gave a minimum age of ~15 000 calendar years making the rock engravings at Qurta the oldest so far found in North Africa.
Citation
Huyge, Dirk; Vandenberghe, Dimitri A.G.; De Dapper, Morgan; Mees, Florias; Claes, Wouter; Darnell, John Coleman (2011). First evidence of Pleistocene rock art in North Africa: securing the age of the Qurta petroglyphs (Egypt) through OSL dating. , Antiquity, Vol. 85, Issue 330, 1184-1193, Antiquity, ISSN: 0003-598X, DOI: 10.1017/s0003598x00061998.Identifiers
issn: 0003-598X
issn: 1745-1744
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng