The First Calendar
The First Calendar
Future
historians will be in a unique position when they come to record the history of
our own times. They will hardly know which facts to select from the great mass
of evidence that steadily accumulates. What is more, they will not have to rely
solely on the written word. Films, videos, CDs, and CD-ROMS are just some of the
bewildering amount of information they will have. They will be able, as it
were, to see and hear us in action. But the historian attempting to reconstruct
the distant past is always faced with a difficult task. He has to deduce what
he can from the few scanty clues available. Even seemingly insignificant
remains can shed interesting light on the history of early man.
Up to
now, historians have assumed that calendars came into being with the advent of
agriculture, for then man was faced with a real need to understand something
about the seasons. Recent scientific evidence seems to indicate that this
assumption is incorrect.
Historians
have long been puzzled by dots, lines, and symbols which have been engraved on
walls, bones, and the ivory tusks of mammoths. The nomads who made these
markings lived by hunting and fishing during the last Ice Age which began about
35,000 B.C. and ended about 10,000 B.C. By correlating markings made in various
parts of the world, historians have been able to read this difficult code. They
have found that it is connected with the passage of days and the phases of the
moon. It is, in fact, a primitive type of calendar. It has long been known that
the hunting scenes depicted on walls were not simply a form of artistic
expression. They had a definite meaning, for they were as near as early man
could get to writing. It is possible that there is a definite relation between
these paintings and the markings that sometimes accompany them. It seems that
man was making a real effort to understand the seasons 20,000 years earlier
than has been supposed.
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