A human face carved on a pebble from the Late Natufian site of Nahal Ein Gev II

  • Grosman L
  • Shaham D
  • Valletta F
  • et al.
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Abstract

There is a paucity of Palaeolithic art in the southern Levant prior to 15 000 years ago. The Natufian culture (15 000–11 500 BP; Grosman 2013) marks a threshold in the magnitude and diversity of artistic manifestations (Bar-Yosef 1997). Nevertheless, depictions of the human form remain rare—only a few representations of the human face have been reported to date. This article presents a 12 000-year-old example unearthed at the Late Natufian site of Nahal Ein Gev II (NEGII), just east of the Sea of Galilee, Israel (Figure 1). The object provides a glimpse into Natufian conventions of human representation, and opens a rare opportunity for deeper understanding of the Natufian symbolic system.

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Grosman, L., Shaham, D., Valletta, F., Abadi, I., Goldgeier, H., Klein, N., … Munro, N. D. (2017). A human face carved on a pebble from the Late Natufian site of Nahal Ein Gev II. Antiquity, 91(358). https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2017.122

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