Rock Art and Early Cultural Dynamics in Eastern Mongolia

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Ganbold Ankhsanaa, Enkhbayar Mijiddorj, B. Davaatseren, W. Taylor
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Abstract

Despite playing a key role in the history and prehistory of human societies in eastern Eurasia, the archaeological record of eastern Mongolia – particularly its rich tradition of rock art and petroglyphs – has been poorly integrated into western archaeological literature. We summarize a large body of recent scholarship from Mongolia’s three eastern provinces, Khentii, Sukhbaatar, and Dornod, to identify evidence of cultural activity in the region stretching from the Palaeolithic through the historic era. Rock art imagery from Eastern Mongolia reveals key insights into the region’s under-investigated archaeological record, including the co-occurrence of humans with megafauna such as the wooly rhinocerous and mammoth during the last Ice Age, occupation of the region by pre-pastoral cultures during the Holocene, and important pulses of activity associated with early pastoral cultures and empires during the Late Bronze and Iron Ages. Future analysis of these sites promises to help us understand the murkiest chapters in the region’s past.
东蒙古的岩石艺术与早期文化动态
尽管在欧亚大陆东部人类社会的历史和史前史上发挥了关键作用,但东蒙古的考古记录——特别是其丰富的岩石艺术和岩画传统——却很少被纳入西方考古文献。我们总结了蒙古东部三省(Khentii、Sukhbaatar和Dornod)最近的大量学术成果,以确定该地区从旧石器时代到历史时代的文化活动证据。来自东蒙古的岩石艺术图像揭示了该地区未被调查的考古记录的关键见解,包括人类与最后一个冰河期的巨型动物(如长毛犀和猛犸象)的共同出现,全新世前游牧文化对该地区的占领,以及青铜和铁器时代晚期早期游牧文化和帝国相关的重要活动脉冲。未来对这些遗址的分析有望帮助我们了解该地区过去最黑暗的篇章。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Translocal Chinese: East Asian Perspectives
Translocal Chinese: East Asian Perspectives Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
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