Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe Genevieve von Petzinger

There’s something about caves –

a shadowy opening in a limestone
cliff that draws you in.

As you pass through the portal
between light and dark,

you enter a subterranean world –

a place of perpetual gloom,
of earthy smells, of hushed silence.

Long ago in Europe,

ancient people also entered
these underground worlds.

As witness to their passage,

they left behind mysterious
engravings and paintings,

like this panel of humans, triangles
and zigzags from Ojo Guareña in Spain.

You now walk the same path
as these early artists.

And in this surreal, otherworldly place,

it’s almost possible to imagine

that you hear the muffled footfall
of skin boots on soft earth,

or that you see the flickering of a torch
around the next bend.

When I’m in a cave,

I often find myself wondering
what drove these people to go so deep

to brave dangerous and narrow
passageways to leave their mark?

In this video clip,

that was shot half a kilometer,
or about a third of a mile, underground,

in the cave of Cudon in Spain,

we found a series
of red paintings on a ceiling

in a previously unexplored
section of the cave.

As we crawled forward, military-style,
with the ceiling getting ever lower,

we finally got to a point
where the ceiling was so low

that my husband
and project photographer, Dylan,

could no longer achieve focus
on the ceiling with his DSLR camera.

So while he filmed me,

I kept following the trail of red paint
with a single light

and a point-and-shoot camera
that we kept for that type of occasion.

Half a kilometer underground.

Seriously.

What was somebody doing down there
with a torch or a stone lamp?

(Laughter)

I mean – me, it makes sense, right?

But you know,

this is the kind of question that
I’m trying to answer with my research.

I study some of the oldest
art in the world.

It was created by these
early artists in Europe,

between 10,000 and 40,000 years ago.

And the thing is

that I’m not just studying it
because it’s beautiful,

though some of it certainly is.

But what I’m interested in
is the development of the modern mind,

of the evolution of creativity,
of imagination, of abstract thought,

about what it means to be human.

While all species communicate
in one way or another,

only we humans have really
taken it to another level.

Our desire and ability
to share and collaborate

has been a huge part of our success story.

Our modern world is based on a global
network of information exchange

made possible, in large part,
by our ability to communicate –

in particular, using graphic
or written forms of communication.

The thing is, though,

that we’ve been building
on the mental achievements

of those that came before us for so long

that it’s easy to forget that certain
abilities haven’t already existed.

It’s one of the things
I find most fascinating

about studying our deep history.

Those people didn’t have the shoulders
of any giants to stand on.

They were the original shoulders.

And while a surprising number
of important inventions

come out of that distant time,

what I want to talk to you about today
is the invention of graphic communication.

There are three
main types of communication,

spoken, gestural –
so things like sign language –

and graphic communication.

Spoken and gestural are
by their very nature ephemeral.

It requires close contact
for a message to be sent and received.

And after the moment
of transmission, it’s gone forever.

Graphic communication, on the other hand,
decouples that relationship.

And with its invention,
it became possible for the first time

for a message to be
transmitted and preserved

beyond a single moment in place and time.

Europe is one of the first places

that we start to see graphic marks
regularly appearing

in caves, rock shelters
and even a few surviving open-air sites.

But this is not the Europe we know today.

This was a world dominated
by towering ice sheets,

three to four kilometers high,

with sweeping grass plains
and frozen tundra.

This was the Ice Age.

Over the last century,

more than 350 Ice Age rock art sites
have been found across the continent,

decorated with animals, abstract shapes
and even the occasional human

like these engraved figures
from Grotta dell’Addaura in Sicily.

They provide us with a rare glimpse

into the creative world and imagination
of these early artists.

Since their discovery,

it’s been the animals that have received
the majority of the study

like this black horse
from Cullalvera in Spain,

or this unusual purple bison
from La Pasiega.

But for me, it was the abstract shapes,
what we call geometric signs,

that drew me to study the art.

The funny this is that at most sites

the geometric signs far outnumber
the animal and human images.

But when I started on this back in 2007,

there wasn’t even a definitive list
of how many shapes there were,

nor was there a strong sense

of whether the same ones
appeared across space or time.

Before I could even
get started on my questions,

my first step was to compile a database

of all known geometric signs
from all of the rock art sites.

The problem was that while they were
well documented at some sites,

usually the ones
with the very nice animals,

there was also a large number of them
where it was very vague –

there wasn’t a lot
of description or detail.

Some of them hadn’t been visited
in half a century or more.

These were the ones
that I targeted for my field work.

Over the course of two years,

my faithful husband Dylan and I
each spent over 300 hours underground,

hiking, crawling and wriggling
around 52 sites

in France, Spain, Portugal and Sicily.

And it was totally worth it.

We found new, undocumented geometric signs
at 75 percent of the sites we visited.

This is the level of accuracy
I knew I was going to need

if I wanted to start answering
those larger questions.

So let’s get to those answers.

Barring a handful of outliers,
there are only 32 geometric signs.

Only 32 signs

across a 30,000-year time span
and the entire continent of Europe.

That is a very small number.

Now, if these were random
doodles or decorations,

we would expect to see
a lot more variation,

but instead what we find
are the same signs

repeating across both space and time.

Some signs start out strong,
before losing popularity and vanishing,

while other signs are later inventions.

But 65 percent of those signs stayed
in use during that entire time period –

things like lines, rectangles
triangles, ovals and circles

like we see here
from the end of the Ice Age,

at a 10,000-year-old site
high in the Pyrenees Mountains.

And while certain signs
span thousands of kilometers,

other signs had much more
restricted distribution patterns,

with some being limited
to a single territory,

like we see here
with these divided rectangles

that are only found in northern Spain,

and which some researchers have speculated

could be some sort
of family or clan signs.

On a side note,

there is surprising degree
of similarity in the earliest rock art

found all the way from France and Spain
to Indonesia and Australia.

With many of the same signs
appearing in such far-flung places,

especially in that 30,000
to 40,000-year range,

it’s starting to seem increasingly likely

that this invention actually traces back
to a common point of origin in Africa.

But that I’m afraid,
is a subject for a future talk.

So back to the matter at hand.

There could be no doubt that these signs
were meaningful to their creators,

like these 25,000-year-old
bas-relief sculptures

from La Roque de Venasque in France.

We might not know what they meant,
but the people of the time certainly did.

The repetition of the same signs,
for so long, and at so many sites

tells us that the artists
were making intentional choices.

If we’re talking about geometric shapes,

with specific, culturally recognized,
agreed-upon meanings,

than we could very well be looking

at one of the oldest systems
of graphic communication in the world.

I’m not talking about writing yet.

There’s just not enough
characters at this point

to have represented all of the words
in the spoken language,

something which is a requirement
for a full writing system.

Nor do we see the signs
repeating regularly enough

to suggest that they were
some sort of alphabet.

But what we do have
are some intriguing one-offs,

like this panel from La Pasiega in Spain,
known as “The Inscription,”

with its symmetrical markings on the left,

possible stylized representations
of hands in the middle,

and what looks a bit
like a bracket on the right.

The oldest systems of graphic
communication in the world –

Sumerian cuneiform, Egyptian hieroglyphs,
the earliest Chinese script,

all emerged between 4,000
and 5,000 years ago,

with each coming into existence
from an earlier protosystem

made up of counting marks
and pictographic representations,

where the meaning
and the image were the same.

So a picture of a bird would really
have represented that animal.

It’s only later that we start to see
these pictographs become more stylized,

until they almost become unrecognizable

and that we also start to see
more symbols being invented

to represent all those other
missing words in language –

things like pronouns, adverbs, adjectives.

So knowing all this,

it seems highly unlikely that
the geometric signs from Ice Age Europe

were truly abstract written characters.

Instead, what’s much more likely

is that these early artists
were also making counting marks,

maybe like this row of lines
from Riparo di Za Minic in Sicily,

as well as creating
stylized representations

of things from the world around them.

Could some of the signs
be weaponry or housing?

Or what about celestial objects
like star constellations?

Or maybe even rivers, mountains,
trees – landscape features,

possibly like this black penniform
surrounded by strange bell-shaped signs

from the site of El Castillo in Spain.

The term penniform
means “feather-shaped” in Latin,

but could this actually be
a depiction of a plant or a tree?

Some researchers have begun
to ask these questions

about certain signs at specific sites,

but I believe the time has come
to revisit this category as a whole.

The irony in all of this, of course,

is that having just carefully classified
all of the signs into a single category,

I have a feeling that my next step
will involve breaking it back apart

as different types of imagery
are identified and separated off.

Now don’t get me wrong,

the later creation
of fully developed writing

was an impressive feat in its own right.

But it’s important to remember

that those early writing systems
didn’t come out of a vacuum.

And that even 5,000 years ago,

people were already building
on something much older,

with its origins stretching back
tens of thousands of years –

to the geometric signs
of Ice Age Europe and far beyond,

to that point, deep
in our collective history,

when someone first came up with the idea
of making a graphic mark,

and forever changed the nature
of how we communicate.

Thank you.

(Applause)

洞穴有一些东西——

石灰岩悬崖上的一个阴暗开口
吸引你。

当你穿过
光明与黑暗之间的门户时,

你进入了一个地下世界——

一个永远阴暗
、泥土气味、寂静的地方。

很久以前,在欧洲,

古人也进入了
这些地下世界。

作为他们经过的见证,

他们留下了神秘的
版画和绘画,

比如
西班牙奥霍瓜雷尼亚的这幅人类、三角形和锯齿形的面板。

你现在
和这些早期艺术家走的是同一条路。

在这个超现实的、超凡脱俗的地方

,几乎

可以想象你听到
软土地上皮靴的低沉脚步声,

或者你看到下一个弯道附近火炬闪烁的声音

当我在一个山洞里时,

我经常发现自己想知道
是什么驱使这些人走得如此之深

,冒着危险和狭窄的
通道去留下他们的印记?

在这段视频片段中

,拍摄于地下半公里
或大约三分之一英里的地方,

位于西班牙库顿的洞穴中,

我们

在之前未开发
的洞穴部分的天花板上发现了一系列红色画作。

当我们以军事方式向前爬行时
,天花板越来越低,

我们终于到达了一个
高度,

以至于我的丈夫
和项目摄影师 Dylan

无法
再用他的数码单反相机对天花板进行对焦。

因此,当他给我拍摄时,

我一直
用一盏灯

和一个傻瓜相机跟踪红色油漆的踪迹
,我们为这种场合保留了这种相机。

地下半公里。

严重地。

有人
拿着手电筒或石灯在下面做什么?

(笑声)

我的意思是——我,这是有道理的,对吧?

但你知道,

这是
我试图通过我的研究来回答的问题。

我研究一些世界上最古老的
艺术。

它是由这些
欧洲早期艺术家

在 10,000 到 40,000 年前创作的。

问题

是我研究它不仅仅是
因为它很漂亮,

尽管其中一些确实如此。

但我感兴趣的
是现代思维

的发展,创造力
、想象力、抽象思维的演变

,以及作为人类的意义。

虽然所有物种都
以一种或另一种方式交流,但

只有我们人类才真正
将其提升到另一个层次。

我们
分享和协作的愿望和能力

是我们成功故事的重要组成部分。

我们的现代世界建立在全球
信息交换网络的基础

上,这在很大程度上
取决于我们的交流能力

——特别是使用图形
或书面形式的交流。

但问题是

,我们长期以来一直在建立在我们

之前的那些人的心理成就上,

以至于很容易忘记某些
能力还没有存在。

这是
我发现

研究我们深厚的历史最令人着迷的事情之一。

那些人没有
任何巨人的肩膀可以站立。

它们是最初的肩膀。

虽然

在那个遥远的时代出现了数量惊人的重要发明,但

我今天想和你谈谈的
是图形通信的发明。

交流主要分为
三种类型:

口语、手势
(比如手语)

和图形交流。

口语和
手势本质上是短暂的。

它需要密切联系
才能发送和接收消息。

在传输的那一刻之后
,它就永远消失了。

另一方面,图形通信
将这种关系解耦。

随着它的发明,
第一次有可能在一个时间

地点之外传输和保存信息。

欧洲

是我们开始看到图形标记
经常出现

在洞穴、岩石庇护
所甚至一些幸存的露天场所的第一批地方之一。

但这不是我们今天所知道的欧洲。

这是一个
由高耸的冰原主宰的世界,

高三到四公里,

有广阔的草原
和冰冻的苔原。

这是冰河时代。

上个世纪,在整个大陆上发现

了 350 多个冰河时代的岩石艺术遗址

装饰着动物、抽象的形状
,甚至偶尔还有人类,

比如这些
来自西西里岛 Grotta dell’Addaura 的雕刻人物。

它们为我们提供了对这些早期艺术家

的创意世界和想象力
的难得一瞥。

自从他们发现以来,

接受大部分研究的动物就是这些动物,

比如
来自西班牙库拉维拉的黑马,或者来自拉帕西加的

这种不寻常的紫色野牛

但对我来说,正是抽象的形状,
我们称之为几何符号

,吸引了我去研究艺术。

有趣的是,在大多数网站

上,几何符号的数量远远
超过动物和人类图像。

但是当我在 2007 年开始研究这个问题时,

甚至没有一个明确的列表
来说明有多少形状,

也没有强烈的感觉

来判断相同的形状是否会
出现在空间或时间上。

在我
开始回答我的问题之前,

我的第一步是编译一个

包含所有岩石艺术网站的所有已知几何符号
的数据库。

问题是,虽然它们
在某些站点上得到了很好的记录,

通常是那些
拥有非常漂亮的动物的站点,

但其中也有很多
非常模糊——

没有太多
的描述或细节。

其中一些已经
半个世纪或更长时间没有被访问过。

这些
是我实地工作的目标。

在两年的时间里,

我忠实的丈夫迪伦和我
各自在地下度过了 300 多个小时,

在法国、西班牙、葡萄牙和西西里岛的 52 个地点附近徒步、爬行和扭动。

这是完全值得的。

我们在我们访问的 75% 的站点中发现了新的、未记录的几何标志

如果我想开始回答
那些更大的问题,我知道我需要达到这个准确度。

那么让我们来看看这些答案。

除少数异常值外,
只有 32 个几何符号。

在 30,000 年的时间跨度
和整个欧洲大陆上只有 32 个标志。

这是一个非常小的数字。

现在,如果这些是随机的
涂鸦或装饰品,

我们希望
看到更多的变化,

但我们发现的
是相同的符号

在空间和时间上重复出现。

一些标志
在失去人气和消失之前开始强大,

而其他标志则是后来的发明。

但在整个时间段内,这些标志中有 65% 一直
在使用

——比如我们在冰河时代末期看到的线条、矩形、
三角形、椭圆形和圆形

在比利牛斯山脉高处有 10,000 年历史的遗址
山脉。

虽然某些标志
跨越数千公里,但

其他标志的
分布模式更为有限

,有些仅限
于单一区域,

就像我们在这里看到
的这些

仅在西班牙北部发现的分割矩形

,一些研究人员推测

可能 是
某种家族或氏族的标志。

顺便说一句,从法国和西班牙
到印度尼西亚和澳大利亚,最早发现的岩画有着惊人的相似度。

随着许多相同的迹象
出现在如此遥远的地方,

特别是在 30,000
到 40,000 年的范围内,

这项发明似乎越来越有可能

真正追溯到
非洲的一个共同起源点。

但我担心,这
是未来谈话的主题。

所以回到手头的事情。

毫无疑问,这些标志
对它们的创造者来说是有意义的,

就像这些来自法国拉洛克德维纳斯克的具有 25,000 年历史的
浅浮雕雕塑一样

我们可能不知道他们的意思,
但当时的人们肯定知道。

相同符号的重复
如此长时间,在如此多的网站上

告诉我们,艺术家
们正在做出有意的选择。

如果我们谈论的是几何形状,

具有特定的、文化认可的、
公认的含义,

那么我们很可能会

看到世界上最古老
的图形通信系统之一。

我还不是在谈论写作。

此时没有足够的
字符

来表示
口语中的所有单词,


是完整书写系统的要求。

我们也没有看到这些符号
经常重复,

足以表明它们是
某种字母表。

但我们确实
有一些有趣的一次性作品,

比如西班牙拉帕西加的这个面板,
被称为“铭文”

,左边是对称的标记,中间

可能是手的风格化表示

,看起来有点
就像右边的括号一样。

世界上最古老的图形
交流系统——

苏美尔楔形文字、埃及象形文字
、最早的中国文字,

都出现在 4000
到 5000 年前

,每
一个都起源

于由计数标记
和象形表示组成的早期原型系统,

其中 意思
和形象是一样的。

所以一张鸟的照片真的
可以代表那只动物。

直到后来我们才开始看到
这些象形文字变得更加程式化,

直到它们几乎变得无法辨认

,我们也开始看到
更多的符号被发明

来代表
语言中所有其他缺失的单词

——比如代词、副词、形容词。

所以知道了这一切,

欧洲冰河时代的几何符号似乎不太可能

是真正的抽象文字。

相反,更有可能的

是,这些早期艺术家
也在制作计数标记,

也许就像
西西里岛 Riparo di Za Minic 的这一排线条,

以及

对周围世界的事物进行风格化的表现。

有些标志
可能是武器或住房吗?

或者
像星座这样的天体呢?

或者甚至是河流、山脉、
树木——景观特征,

可能就像这个
被西班牙埃尔卡斯蒂略遗址奇怪的钟形标志包围的黑色笔形

penniform这个
词在拉丁语中的意思是“羽毛状”,

但这真的是
对植物或树的描绘吗?

一些研究人员已经开始

特定地点的某些标志提出这些问题,

但我相信现在是
重新审视整个类别的时候了。

当然,所有这一切的讽刺之

处在于,刚刚将
所有标志仔细分类为一个类别,

我有一种感觉,我的下一步
将涉及将其重新分解,

因为不同类型的图像
被识别和分离。

现在不要误会我的意思

,后来
完全发展写作的创作

本身就是一项令人印象深刻的壮举。

但重要的是要记住

,那些早期的书写系统
并非凭空而来。

甚至在 5000 年前,

人们就已经在建造
更古老的东西了

,它的起源可以追溯到
几万年前——


欧洲冰河时代的几何标志,甚至更远,

到那时,
在我们集体历史的深处,

当有人第一次提出
制作图形标记的想法时

,它永远改变
了我们交流方式的本质。

谢谢你。

(掌声)