alj Five Star Member
Number of posts : 9633 Registration date : 2008-12-05 Age : 80 Location : San Antonio
| Subject: Early cave artists were very likely women Mon Oct 14, 2013 3:00 pm | |
| http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/13/cave-artists-women-study_n_4086385.html - Quote :
- For years, researchers have assumed that ancient cave paintings created tens of thousands of years ago were made by men. This belief persisted because so much cave art is related to hunting, the domain of the prehistoric male. However, an American archaeological anthropologist now believes the measurements of ancient cave handprints suggest that the majority of those artists were women.
Dean Snow, an emeritus professor of anthropology at Penn State University, has spent a decade gathering data on cave paintings ranging from 20,000 to 40,000 years old, reports National Geographic. Snow's research culminated in a paper recently published in the journal American Antiquity. His report concludes three-quarters of the cave handprints included in the paper were left by females.
"There has been a male bias in the literature for a long time," Snow told National Geographic. "People have made a lot of unwarranted assumptions about who made these things, and why."
The fact that men did most of the hunting does not necessarily mean they were the only ones handling animals, Snow explained. "It's often the women who haul the meat back to camp, and women are as concerned with the productivity of the hunt as the men are," Snow said, per National Geographic.
In an interview with The Huffington Post, Snow said that he first became interested in cave artist gender bias when reading research by John Manning, a British biologist who studied the differences in male and female hands. Manning's research found that female hands have ring and index fingers of about the same length, while male ring fingers are generally longer than their indexes. Snow realized that he could use ancient hand stencils to measure the finger lengths and determine the gender of the artists who had left them.
He told HuffPost Science that while most archaeologists are forced to work with limited data and a lot of inference, "here was a situation where I realized we could bring a fairly straightforward scientific hypothesis process to bear on an archaeological problem."
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Shelagh Admin
Number of posts : 12662 Registration date : 2008-01-11 Location : UK
| Subject: Re: Early cave artists were very likely women Mon Oct 14, 2013 3:49 pm | |
| Modern male artists seem more focused on the female form in their paintings. Maybe prehistoric females were equally focused on depicting males to decorate their cave dwellings. |
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