Significance: Gobekli Tepe (GT) probably represents the origin of civilisation for most of the world today. Most of us are connected to it in some way, through language and religion (proto-Nostratic), or genetics at least. The Pillars: GT is famous for its anomalous megalithic pillars, and especially the symbols carved on them. Most people think these symbols are telling an important story - they are not just random pictures of animals. Klauss Schmidt, who discovered GT and led its excavation, until his death in 2014, certainly thought so. It follows that the only way we will ever be able to properly understand Gobekli Tepe, and therefore the origin of civilisation, is through reading its pillars. Deutsche Archaeological Institute : the DAI operates the Gobekli Tepe dig. Despite the immense significance of the site, they continue to have a casual disregard for the information encoded on its pillars. Over 60 pillars have been uncovered, but only around 20 are documented by the DAI. Alt
This is very interesting. As a farmer I wonder if there was any agriculture culture before this recent warm period? Because agriculture needs a steady and predictable klimat, year after year...And the figures from climate and temperature before YD seem to have been to much up and down to give humans a possibility to agriculture. Only maybe in some places where the climate was steady. So people must have been hunters and gathers...
ReplyDeleteNext problem must be all that filling material in places like Köbekli tepe. That can not been done by the people! I must be some other explanations.
Thomas Gunnarson
tg.edared@gmail. com
There are research papers that suggest exactly this - that climate was too unstable to develop agriculture over the last ice age. Like you, I'm not sure I buy it - there would have been regions near the equator or in the southern hemisphere where climate was sufficiently stable.
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