Baja California Rock Art Dated to 7,500 Years Ago
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/07/0717_030717_...
John Roach
National Geographic News
July 17, 2003
The giant rock art murals that grace the walls of hundreds of shelters and caves found in the hardscrabble hills of the high sierra in Baja California
Sur, Mexico, date back as far as 7,500 years ago, according to data from an ongoing study of the area.
The ancient dates for the paintings cast little light on the mystery of who made them and why, but it suggests that whoever the painters were they
came well before the Aztecs established their culture in central Mexico in the 12th century A.D.
"Once we did the dating and got to know how old they are, we were surprised by their antiquity because they look so fresh, so well preserved," said
Alan Watchman, a geoscientist and Australian Research Fellow at the Australian National University in Canberra and co-leader of the study team.
The paintings are of giant humans and animals, mostly done in red and black but also in white and yellow. The human figures are static, but the
animals bound in herd-like movement across the rock-wall canvases.
Harry Crosby, an author and Baja California rock art expert in La Jolla, California, suggests that the paintings might represent a sense of "us and
them" with the humans painted to depict how they dealt with each other in a static manner but with the animals as "food on the hoof."
"The vision would be of the animals getting out of there and when [the painters] picture them one could argue they are trying to set up a kind of
hunting magic," he said, but added that it is difficult to know what they were thinking if we don't even know who they were.
The murals had previously never been dated and even today little is known about the people who created them or what they were meant to communicate.
Watchman and his colleagues are conducting a multi-year project to put the paintings in cultural context.
The team, which is partially funded by the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration, is working in the Sierra de
Guadalupe. The murals are found in shelters that hang within spectacularly steep and pristine canyons.
Before the team started work in 2001, about 90 rock art sites were known in the Sierra de Guadalupe. Since then, the team has documented more than 320
additional sites. Hundreds more sites are known from the Sierra de San Francisco, which lies to the north.
Now that preliminary dates for the paintings are established, the team is searching for a site they can excavate for other materials to substantiate
the dates of the art and help tell the story of who the painters were, how they used the landscape, and how they traveled.
"We are trying to put all that information together, but it is an arduous task," said Watchman, who is collaborating with Lucero Gutierrez, an
archaeologist with Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History and Marisabel Hernandez Llosas, an archaeologist with the National Council
of Science and Technology of Argentina.
Crosby said that until archaeologists are able to substantiate the rock art dates with other well-dated materials the mystery of the painters will
remain.
"There hasn't been enough archaeology done yet and not enough dating for anybody to finger some group that was known to be on the peninsula at that
time," he said. "We simply have not got enough information to do that."
Crosby began exploring the region in 1967 and first published The Cave Paintings of Baja California: Discovering the Great Murals of an Unknown People
in 1975. A second edition of the book was published in 1997.
He said the dates by Watchman and colleagues confirm his belief that the painters were not Cochimi, a group of native peoples who were present in the
region when Jesuit missionaries from Spain arrived at the end of the 17th century.
Missionaries who were familiar with the paintings confirm this belief in their journals where they write of asking the Cochimi about the paintings and
being told a widespread tale that the paintings were done by a race of giant people long past.
But the tales did not faze the late Clement Meighan, an anthropologist from the University of California at Los Angeles who in 1962 radiocarbon-dated
a wooden peg recovered from one of the rock art sites as approximately 550 years old, which he used as an indicator to date the paintings to the time
of the Cochimi.
But when Crosby looks at the murals he cannot imagine them as being so young.
"The vast majority of them are painted on volcanic agglomerate; it is a volcanic material that literally agglomerates from non-basaltic rock. It isn't
flows of lava, it is beds of material like pumice and ash that over a period of millions of years have agglomerated into surprisingly hard material,"
he said.
Knowing the geology of the painting surface is important, added Crosby, to understand the pace at which the paintings deteriorate. Volcanic
agglomeration, he said, breaks down over thousands of years owing to the subtle expansion and contraction forces caused by humidity and drying.
"A lot of these rock art sites have over-painting," said Crosby. "One figure is painted on top of another. In some places they have as many as five
layers."
The newer layers are quite fresh appearing and visible, but the older layers are so degraded that they have almost disappeared. To Crosby this
suggests that many years must have passed between the first painting and the last.
"These are older than Clement Meighan and others have suggested," he said. "There is no other way to account for that kind of difference between the
oldest and newest paints."
Watchman, who is a specialist in rock art dating, obtained his dates from painted samples collected in 2001. More than 30 samples have been dated so
far and several of them are at least 5,000 years old. Some go back 7,500 years, suggesting a painting culture that lasted for millennia.
"It says something about the continuity of culture over a long period of time," he said.
Further studies in the years to come may resolve the mystery of who painted the murals, for what reasons, and how they vary through space and time. In
the meantime, the researchers believe their recent discoveries warrant protection.
In 1993, the United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization recognized the well-documented rock art murals in the nearby Sierra de
San Francisco as a World Heritage site.
The research team is asking that the boundaries of this site be extended south to include the rock art in the Sierra de Guadalupe so that it can be
properly protected and preserved for future generations.
"What we are trying to do is make them aware that there are many more sites in the sierra and that this is a rare set of paintings and an
environmental situation that requires protection," said Watchman.
Crosby believes that the remoteness of the sites affords them ample protection and that environmental and conservation organizations have already
succeeded in educating the local populations that it is economically advantageous to preserve the paintings.
"The process of surface degradation is going to continue," he said. "But that is a slow process. Five hundred years from now we'd find the paintings
relatively little changed."
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