Studies of rock art in Dakhleh Oasis
Egypt

Studies of rock art in Dakhleh Oasis


Nauka w Polsce

"The creators of rock drawings in Dakhla were shepherds. They lived about 8 – 5,000 years ago” – said Prof. Michał Kobusiewicz from the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology at the Polish Academy of Sciences, who is studying the relicts of human presence in Dakhla Oasis in Egypt. The oasis is located in the middle of the Western Desert. It is known among others due to numerous rock engravings – depicting women, giraffes and elephants. Full of life in ancient times, today the dry valleys of the river (“wadi” in Arabic) are a witness of the past, and are the subject of interest to researchers.

What do we know about the authors of these ancient engravings? Archaeologists have located numerous settlements from the Stone Age located in the area of water sources, which were numerous at the time. “These are concentrations of stone and flint articles, fragments of pottery, quern stones used to grind plant food, bones from farm or hunted animals. Sometimes there are also traces of primitive dwellings in the shape of stone circles, which are the basis of huts or tents covered with skins” – the professor explains.

Prof. Kobusiewicz, besides research on the settlements is also taking part in recording the rock art. One of the wadi, named by archaeologists “Coloured Wadi” is studied by the professor. “The Wadi is over a dozen kilometres long. Rock engravings, largely in groups, though sometimes alone, are located on its sandy slopes. Last season, the picture and photographic documentation was continued and previously found engravings were copied onto foils” – the archaeologist explained.


See the above page for more details and a photograph of one of the rock art scenes. Click on the thumbnail image to see a slightly larger photograph, which shows the painted details with greater clarity.






- New Prehistoric Sites Found By Polish Academy In Faiyum, Bahariya, Farafra And Sinai
Nauka w Polsce With two photos. During this year's prospecting the Combined Prehistoric Expedition of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology located 46 unknown archaeological sites in Egypt, dating from the Lower Paleolithic to the late Neolithic....

- Photos Of Wadi Hammamat
Flickr (Su Bayfield) Thanks very much to Vincent Brown for pointing out a set of photos on Flickr of the Wadi Hammamat engravings, taken by Su Bayfield. The Wadi Hammamat is one of the most undersung pieces of archaeology in Upper Egypt, and is a relatively...

- Daily Photo: Eastern Desert Rock Art
As a nod to the rock art research mentioned above at Dakhleh Oasis in the Western Desert, here are some photographs of rock art in the Eastern Desert - a very different kettle of fish! For a start, except for one known image, all of the rock art in the...

- North Kharga Oasis Survey - 2006 Season - Exploration Of The Darb Ain Amur
NKOS 2006 (S. Ikram and C.Rossi) The NKOS website has been udpated with details of the 2006 season. See the above page for the full story, but here's an extract. The first season of the North Kharga Oasis Survey Phase II (NKOS II) focused on investigating...

- A Tomb Under Hanging Rock
http://tinyurl.com/z436a (en.naukawpolsce.pl)"An increasing number of traces indicate that on a rock shelf above the temple of Hatshepsut is a tomb belonging to a Pharaoh from the 21st dynasty – says Prof. Andrzej Niwiński of the Institute of Archaeology...



Egypt








.