
ARHS, Denmark-researchers have discovered early marks of blue colors on a 13,000-year-old ancient stone sample exported from the Mehlem Diestasium located in central Germany, Art news Using a suit of reports analytical methods, headed by the team, led by Easy Wisdom, an archaeologist at the University of Ahars, identified the Oceshis as a mineral ezorite, a pigment that was not previously found in the European Paleathic artwork. Wish and his colleagues suggest that the stone was used to grind pigments or mix paint. Scholars thought that the artists of this period mainly work black and red pigments, and the blue color lack of color is the cause of naturally blue minerals. The desire said, “It challenges what we think we know about the use of pylavathak.” “The presence of Azorite shows that the yellowish people had a deep knowledge of mineral pigments and they could have access to a wide colored palette that we thought before – and may be selected in the way they use some colors.” It says blue minerals have been used for other activities that are widely hidden in archaeological records, such as painting fabric or body paint. Read the original scholarly article about this research Antiques. To read about the rare ancient painting methods viewing in the Spanish cave, go to the “pale palette”.
The early use of blue pigments was identified in Europe, which was previously published on archaeological magazines.







