Archaeologists find 12,000-year-old pictograph at Gobeklitepe

Gobeklitepe
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Excavations being conducted at the ancient city of Göbeklitepe in Turkey have uncovered an ancient pictograph on an obelisk which researchers say could be the earliest known pictograph ever discovered.

A pictograph is an image that conveys meaning through its resemblance to a physical object. Such images are most commonly found in pictographic writing, such as hieroglyphics or other characters used by ancient Sumerian and Chinese civilizations. Some non-literate cultures in parts of Africa, South America and Oceania still use them.

“The scene on the obelisk unearthed in Göbeklitepe could be construed as the first pictograph because it depicts an event thematically” explained Director of the Şanlıurfa Museum, Müslüm Ercan, to the Hurriyet Daily News. Ercan is leading the excavation at Göbeklitepe. “It depicts a human head in the wing of a vulture and a headless human body under the stela. There are various figures like cranes and scorpions around this figure. This is the portrayal of a moment; it could be the first example of pictograph. They are not random figures. We see this type of thing portrayal on the walls in 6,000-5,000 B.C. in Çatalhöyük [in modern-day western Turkey].”

The ‘Vulture-Stone’.

The ‘Vulture-Stone’. Credit: Alistair Coombs

The artifacts discovered in the ancient city have provided information about ancient burial traditions in the area in which bodies were left in the open for raptors such as vultures to consume. According to Mr Ercan, this enabled the soul of the deceased to be carried into the sky. It was called “burial in the sky” and was depicted on the obelisks in Göbeklitepe. Such rituals were conducted in and around the city around 12,000 years ago.
Many of the items discovered on the site have not been seen before anywhere else in the world and thus are the first of their kind to be discovered.

Göbeklitepe is situated on the top of a hill about 15 kilometres away from Sanliurfa in South-eastern Turkey. The city can be dated back to 10,000 BC and consists of a series of circular and oval shaped structures that were first excavated by Professor Klaus Schmidt supported by the German Archaeological Institute. Schmidt travelled to the site having heard about it from accounts of other previous visits by anthropologists from the University of Chicago and Istanbul University in the 1960’s. Both institutions ignored the site, believing it to be nothing more than a medieval graveyard.

Artifacts found on the site indicate that the city was intended for ritual use only and not as a domain for human occupation. Each of the 20 structures consists of a ring of walls surrounding two T-shaped monumental pillars between 3 metres (9 feet) and 6 metres high (19 feet) and weighing between 40 and 60 tons.

Enormous T-shaped pillars at Göbeklitepe.

Enormous T-shaped pillars at Göbeklitepe. Credit: Alistair Coombs

Archaeologists believe these pillars are stylised representations of human beings because of the human appendages carved into the stone. These images are accompanied by those of animals including foxes, snakes, wild boars, cranes and ducks.  

The archaeologists believe Göbeklitepe was used as a religious centre. Geo-radar work has revealed evidence of 23 temple structures in the area. Two of the obelisks in the city were constructed in the form of a letter T and are positioned opposite each other within a circle of smaller, round obelisks.

Ercan said that the museum at Şanlıurfa contains a small sculpture of a pig that was discovered in front of the central stelas in the ‘C’ temple at Göbeklitepe. Such statues may have depicted sacred beings.

Work on the basic infrastructure of a roof to cover the site and help preserve its structures and artefacts has just been completed, ready for the construction of the roof itself. This is an EU project and the archaeologists aim to complete it in eight months’ time. 

Featured image: Göbekli Tepe in Turkey is the oldest known temple in the world. Photo source: Wikimedia

By Robin Whitlock

East Van (not verified)    29 November, 2016 - 02:04

In reply to by j franklin (not verified)

Your comment good sir just seems to much like a Space Gordon adventure, not sure if it's an overactive sci-fi imagination or to much acid in the old days. I've never really bought into the theory that the site was buried by the creators of this massive site...the logistics of this massive undertaking just does not seem possible or probable ..more likely it was some planetary natural disaster that occurred some 12,000 years ago...which makes more sense ....People like to buy into these fantastic theories like that of the Heaven's Gate so called religious cult ...when back in 1997 39 members of this group committed suicide in order to reach the ET. space ship that was following the Comet Hale–Bopp. .... However we are all individuals with different thoughts and opinions and thats what makes these types of discussions interesting ...

Moe Howard (not verified)    19 July, 2015 - 13:51

Seems to me they are corrals that wild animals were herded into and trapped.

RichardMartin (not verified)    10 February, 2016 - 14:31

In reply to by Moe Howard (not verified)

I usually dont get on peoples opinions. But please, this is a MAJOR discovery of our human race from over 12,000 years ago. They deeper they dig the more massive the structures are, the first ones they uncovered are the least advanced. the deeper the go the more intense and larger they become meaning the technology was more advance. Not only that. ALL they structures was filled in on purpose to protect and hide them over 3000 years ago. This was a major religious, social, learning center of pre history that we know of. Much is still to be gleemed about this awesome site.

Valued Customer (not verified)    22 April, 2017 - 23:04

In reply to by Moe Howard (not verified)

I must point out, as a hunter, that I frequently make traps of multiton stones, because that's the easiest way to trap tasty animals on high mountain peaks.

Kappa.

It is clear that these pictograms represent a history, and included in that history, if current professional interpretations are correct, is the devastating impact and airburst of numerous cometary fragments that are also believed to have caused the Younger Dryas just prior to the time these stela were constructed.

The information conveyed to their progeny with these monoliths was stored on media that was persistent through such cataclysm, megaliths, in a universal language, pictograms of the zodiac etc...

This was a sophisticated record from a people who understood very well the change over time of language, and the delicacy of other forms of written record, implying a society that was familiar with the pests and other destructive processes that make paper and parchment so temporary.

With cranes and power tools we might be able to recreate such a construction today, but it is notable that we do not use such megaliths, and reflect on why that is. It is much easier and cheaper to build with smaller stones and bricks. However things constructed thusly are far less durable.

The only reason people have used megaliths to build is to make things endure. That these megalithic structures around the world have indeed endured millenia, while nothing else has, is self evident.

Gerry Maher (not verified)    21 July, 2015 - 16:09

Could be some sort of ark like commenarating the events of noah and the ark and the flood.