Close Explore CSIRO menu

Explore CSIRO

Community

CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

CSIRO Banner
Group of petroglyphs in Lena Hara Cave, East Timor. Credit: John Brush

Group of petroglyphs in Lena Hara Cave, East Timor. Credit: John Brush

Giant rats lead scientists to ancient face carvings

Reference: 11/14

Ancient stone faces carved into the walls of a well-known limestone cave in East Timor have been discovered by a team searching for fossils of extinct giant rats.

  • 11 February 2011

The team of archaeologists and palaeontologists were working in Lene Hara Cave on the northeast tip of East Timor.

“Looking up from the cave floor at a colleague sitting on a ledge, my head torch shone on what seemed to be a weathered carving,” CSIRO’s Dr Ken Aplin said.

“I shone the torch around and saw a whole panel of engraved prehistoric human faces on the wall of the cave.

“The local landowners with whom we were working were stunned by the findings. They said the faces had chosen that day to reveal themselves because they were pleased by the field work we were doing.”

The Lene Hara carvings, or petroglyphs, are frontal, stylised faces each with eyes, a nose and a mouth. One has a circular headdress with rays that frame the face.

"I shone the torch around and saw a whole panel of engraved prehistoric human faces on the wall of the cave,"
CSIRO's Dr Ken Aplin said.

Uranium isotope dating by colleagues at the University of Queensland revealed the ‘sun ray’ face to be around 10,000 to 12,000 years old, placing it in the late Pleistocene. The other faces could not be dated but are likely to be equally ancient.

Lene Hara cave has been visited by archaeologists and rock art specialists since the early 1960s to study its rock paintings, which include hand stencils, boats, animals, human figures and linear decorative motifs. The age of the pigment art in Lene Hara is currently unknown but a fragment of limestone with traces of embedded red ochre was dated previously by Professor Sue O’Connor of The Australian National University to over 30,000 years ago.

Although stylised engravings of faces occur throughout Melanesia, Australia and the Pacific, the Lene Hara petroglyphs are the only examples that have been dated to the Pleistocene. No other petroglyphs of faces are known to exist anywhere on the island of Timor.

“Recording and dating the rock art of Timor should be a priority for future research, because of its cultural significance and value in understanding the development of art in our past,” Professor O’Connor said.

‘Faces of the ancestors revealed: discovery and dating of a Pleistocene-age petroglyph in Lene Hara Cave, East Timor’ was published in the Journal Antiquity following the discovery in May 2009.

Read more media releases in our Media section.

Media Resources

The player will show in this paragraph
Professor Sue O'Connor - quote one

 

The player will show in this paragraph
Professor Sue O'Connor - quote two

 

The player will show in this paragraph
Dr Ken Aplin - quote one

 

The player will show in this paragraph
Dr Ken Aplin - quote two

 

The player will show in this paragraph
Dr Ken Aplin - quote three

Contact Information

Dr Ken Aplin

Wildlife Biologist

CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences

Phone: 0457 072 774

Email: Andrea.Wild@csiro.au

Prof. Sue O'Connor

The Australian National University

Phone: 02 6125 2245

Alt Phone: 0439 422 543

Email:

Ms Andrea Wild (BSc(Hons), MA(Writing&Lit))

Communication Officer

Phone: 1300 363 400

Email: enquiries@csiro.au

Explore CSIRO

Community

CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

Google Analytics Alternative Clicky