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It’s 12 kilometers long.12,000 years old murals found in the Amazon rainforest

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It’s 12 kilometers long.A 12,000-year-old mural was discovered in the remote area of the Amazon rainforest by AFP Yonhap News Agency.According to the Guardian Sunday Edition Observer, a British and Colombian joint archaeological team discovered a mural depicting humans and animals on a cliff in Chiribicete National Park, Colombia, last year. The prehistoric painting is about 12.87 kilometers wide, and the site of discovery is also called the Sistine Chapel of Ancient People. Because the Sistine Chapel is famous for the world’s largest mural painted by Renaissance master Michelangelo on a 20-meter-high ceiling.There are also traces of ancient people’s palms on the mural.The “br” mural was painted at least 12,000 years ago, showing animals extinct during the Ice Age, such as mastotone, the prehistoric ancestor of elephants, which has not been seen in South America. The camel family’s extinct animals, palaeolama, giant sloths and ice age horses, as well as human palm marks that have been seen in other prehistoric murals.Most aboriginal tribes living in bbrbbr>Amazon are believed to be descendants of the first Siberian migrants believed to have crossed the Bering Bridge up to 17,000 years ago. The Bering Overpass is a land that connects Siberia and Alaska, which were caused by the falling sea level during the Ice Age of Flystose, and at that time, the snowfall was so low that the land route was not damaged that it extended hundreds of kilometers to both continents, providing a way for people to cross over to other areas.The bbr>br벽 murals are currently unknown which tribes have been engraved, but there are two major indigenous tribes, Yanomami and Kayapo, that are believed to have existed for the past few thousand years. The initial report on Yanomami, who lives between the borders of Brazil and Venezuela, came from a story told by a Spanish explorer in 1759 by the chief of another tribe he found. On the other hand, much less was known about the origins of the Kayapo, which is estimated to have a population of 8,600.The aborigines of >br>br>Amazon did not leave textual records until relatively recently, and the humid climate and acid soil there erased almost all traces of their material culture, including the remains. Before the discovery of this mural, what was known about the area’s history before 1500 years was analogous to little-remaining archaeological evidence, such as pottery and arrowheads.Part of an ancient mural found in the Amazon rainforest.
The ancient mural, which offers a glimpse of the civilization that is now gone, is believed to have been created by the first people in history to reach the Amazon. The mural was found in a region called Cerania de la Lindosa, which was so remote that the team had to travel two hours by car and then walk four hours on foot again.”We’re investigating tens of thousands of murals,” said Jose Iriarte, an archaeology professor at Exeter University in England, who heads the Br 책임자인 책임자인
research team. “It will take three generations to document them.” “Now we’re starting to look at extinct animals. These paintings are so natural and well-drawn that even if you say you’re looking at the horse, we hardly doubt them,” he said. “They’re so detailed that you can even see the horse’s fur.”Some of the murals of were painted extremely high on relatively sheer rock walls, which initially embarrassed the research team. However, Iriarte found a depiction of a wooden tower during the mural and thinks it was how the indigenous people could climb to such extreme heights.It is not clear whether the murals were painted for religious purposes, but the team found many large animals in the murals, with people raising their arms and surrounding them as if they were being worshipped.

모습 The Channel 4 documentary team showing an ancient mural found in the Amazon rainforest on camera.Photograph by Ella al-Samahi (br) archaeologist and explorer Ella al-Shamahi.
The mural, which has not been released so far, will be covered in detail on December 5 on British Channel 4 documentary Jungle Mystery: The Lost Kingdom of Amazon. “Some people don’t know that Amazon has not always been a rainforest and was actually much more like a savanna desert a few thousand years ago,” said Ella al-Shamahi, the program’s host and explorer. “It’s very interesting to see this ancient mural about what this land looked like so long ago.”Professor Br>>~~~

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