NEW HYPOTHESIS: The 11,000-Year-Old Göbekli Tepe Bone Plaque | Ancient Architects
发布时间 2022-01-26 19:00:01 来源
摘要
Göbekli Tepe has its fair share of ancient mysteries, and a small bone object, often referred to as a spatula, is one of them, found in 2011 at the iconic 11,500-year-old site in Southeastern Anatolia and measuring just 5.3cm by 1.9 and with a thickness of just 3 mm.
You’d be forgiven for swiftly walking past it in a museum, but according to some, it’s an incredibly important artefact, because it’s the first pictorial representation of the famous Göbekli Tepe T-shaped pillars ever discovered. Or is it?
The claims regarding this small bone artefact are something I can look into without any bias. It is something that has always split opinion and so now, with a good knowledge of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Turkey, I feel I can give my own independent take.
In this video, I take a look at the claims made by Andrew Collins, the counter claims by the German archaeologists who work at Göbekli Tepe, and then I conduct my own analysis and give my own interpretation. I would love to know your thoughts so please do comment below and join in with the discussion.
All images are taken from the below sources and Google Images for educational purposes only. Please subscribe to Ancient Architects, Like the video, and please leave a comment below. Thank you.
Sources:
Great video by Megalithomania: https://youtu.be/NfU-nFXlZMU
Learn more on Andrew Collins' website: http://www.andrewcollins.com/page/articles/plaque.htm
Read the article from Ancient Origins: https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/first-pictorial-representation-gobekli-tepe-found-003862?nopaging=1
Check out the response from the German archaeologists: https://tepetelegrams.wordpress.com/2017/03/15/iconology-and-archaeology-or-whats-in-that-picture/
#AncientArchitects #GobekliTepe #AncientHistory
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