Place of ancient paintings and
In Australia, there is an extraordinary gallery of rock art below the Noorberg field. The search and research in the Kanalda Cave has revealed a lot about these ancient marks as well as the early occupation of mining and Australia, such as Kieran Walsh, April Noval, and Klim Lari.
Australia’s Nolber Plane is the world’s largest semi -capitalist Kartest system and thus consists of thousands of underground caves. Some are adorned with stalicites and stallgamits, some have cave spiders, and some have aburronous archeology, including rock art. This imagery is mostly comprised of hands -stansels rather than symbolic art, but the only amazing Conalded Cave preserves a wide range of deep paintings under the field of nobleber. In recognition of the importance of the site, it was given the status of a national heritage (Australian) national heritage in 2014 – for the first time as a site of a potential archaeological interest.
Konalda cave is located about 30 km north of the mountains of Nolber, located on the southern Australian part of the South, which falls rapidly in the sea. The cave is internationally recognized for the world’s most impressive display ‘Finger Flutation’, a special form of engraving on the soft cave. Such traces deliberately draw fingers at some level, causing traces of movement. Examples of this technique are not just found in Australia. Instead, comparable effects in the palyothek caves in southern France and northern Spain have been identified.
The painting is sufficient for the Kanalda cave to be able to be a national heritage status, but this site is also known for the proof that it protects it for prehistoric chapmic mining. The term ‘mining’, as used here, is related to the deliberate extraction of the chapm to make the tool. Large nodols of Chakmak naturally fabricate the upper walls of the central chamber and passage paths. These nodols are subject to ‘crystal warming’, which eventually causes fractures, resulting in large parts of the cave. Once you arrived, the chamk was readily available to make a tool by the chapmic people, an activity that was inside the cave or on the ground.
In 1937, a 40 -kilometer museum containing a 40 -grade blade blade containing a package of the Kangaro skin was obtained from a native man living 100 km west of the Conaldeda Cave. Now we know that many thousand -year -old, Nollerber Flint, was a desired item traded by long distance routes, which is well -cleared by the ability to take pearl shells from Brom to Broom in northwestern West Australia. However, archaeological discipline in Australia in 1937 was not formal, and it was not believed that he had been in the continent for more than a thousand years. Twenty years later, all of this was to change, Konalda cave played an important role in understanding the Uburaijal occupation and understanding the Australian archeology as its separate discipline. Along with all of this, the cave has contributed to the study of ‘Finger Floating’ painting.
Hungary on the nalerber
Prior to 1949, Dr. Alexander (Sander) was the head of the National Museum in Budapest in Hungary. After 1949, she joined Australia in the flow of the post -war European immigrants, just to find out that the credentials of her ‘old world’ do not maintain the same value. Upon arrival, he was the most capable and experienced archaeologist in Australia, but struggled to get an institutional appointment. Instead, he volunteered his skills on archaeological activities, and lived in various European languages and lived. Despite the lack of Gallus’s formal status, it was the one who sent the first photos of engraving in Kanalda cave. He immediately knew what he was looking at and used his small circle to support the campaign on this site.
The Konalda cave is located about 1,200 km from the nearest capital (Adelaide), and was located right north of an unmanned highway in the late 1950s, which was notorious for the pit, which was trapped by the size of the passenger car and any vehicle that rescued the divers. Nevertheless, the post -war Hungarian archaeologists raised themselves and a small team of fans to the west to establish whether the cave had really evidence of extraordinary use. The confirmation was immediately and its first excavation was in the late 1958, which continued with work in the next 25 years – always faces the challenge of extraordinary and inadequate funds. Galus fully relied on voluntary teams, mostly comprising university students, who reached so far that they would raise their funds for supply of their food and supplies by requesting local manufacturers in Adelaide and requesting local manufacturers in Adelaide. Despite many difficulties, Galce and his passionate volunteers opened three trenches – the last of which was digged into a depth of 4m – and the tin chapmic was removed for analysis in Adelaide. He also investigated a widespread display of finger flute and other painters, which included some 350mughter cave wall in the black chamber.
Galus was not the only Hungarian in the field of Nolber. Lajobomer Marvin was also conducting research, surveying thousands of square kilometers and looking for archaeological materials and rock shelters. It is noteworthy that Maran made numerous and often wide digests of the navelber caves, and produced a huge data of raw data for his doctoral thesis. He, too, failed to secure the institutional appointment, and his wide searches were not published. However, their unpublished reports and research thesis are continuing to offer a very valuable baseline to investigate archaeological sites. Without these two extreme fearless and determined Hungary, archaeological research can never be done on the field of Nolber, because it was those who encouraged others to advance similar efforts in the remote and barren zone. But it was particularly Gallus, which was able to encourage completely extraordinary event in the Conderda Cave.
Another team appeared
In 1967, Galce and his team added another lead archaeologist – Richard vs. Wright. Pragithask was a graduate from the Rights University of Cambridge, who also held a meeting with Sydney University by that time. He brought his team, which included an experts for investigating rock art, Pragithask, sesame seeds, sticks, animals and plants. In 1971, Wright compiled, which is still the only public publication on the Kanalda cave. With too much levels of financing and direct access to the country’s key radio carbon laboratory, it determined strictly dating from the deep trench of excavation. Galus had previously arranged some sesame history and the results were really surprised in the light of the existing assumptions about the beginning of the occupation of Australia.
Both Galce and Wright agreed that the cave had never been a place for accommodation. Instead, it was a stem source and place of mark in the dark yesterday. When the question came about how long the people have been using the cave, however, Wright found no evidence that had gone beyond the period of 22,000-15,000 years ago. This is quite the opposite of the proposal of gallose activity from 31,000 to 8,000 years ago. Galus also estimates that the lowest destination associated with the oldest archaeological content is the history of C.45,000 years ago. Although such a history will not be amazing today, it was surprising to suggest anything before the fleet of dates published for human activity from 50,000 to 45,000 years ago in northern Australia, suggesting anything before 20,000 years ago in the 1960s. He said, the question of the question that when the Aborigenal people first used the Konalda cave – and when the activity was over – the researchers continue to bother for various reasons. In particular, uncertainty is due to a small proportion of quartz, which is used for dating in the layers of the sesame, and the effects of sudden heavy rainfall, which can result in reservoirs. However, highlighting the previous research and free -free dating combinations in close sites containing deep reserves make it clear that the Aboriginal activity in the Kanalda cave is equal to the gallose estimates compared to the right.
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