Featured: Ark of Secrets - Neolithic spirit alive in the Middle Ages

Ark of Secrets - Neolithic spirit alive in the Middle Ages

Random Image


Jenny Twig and Tib

The Ancient Celts, Barry Cunliffe

The Ancient Celts, Barry Cunliffe

Who's Online

There are currently, 340 guests and 3 members online.

You are a guest. To join in, please register for free by clicking here

Sponsors

<< News >> Jerimalai - Cave or Rock Shelter in Indonesia

Submitted by bat400 on Tuesday, 26 June 2012  Page Views: 10150

Natural PlacesSite Name: Jerimalai
Country: Indonesia
NOTE: This site is 388.267 km away from the location you searched for.

Type: Cave or Rock Shelter
 Nearest Village: Tutuala
Latitude: 8.4S  Longitude: 127.250000E
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
no data Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
no data Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
no data Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
1
Be the first person to rate this site - see the 'Contribute!' box in the right hand menu.

Internal Links:
External Links:

Jerimalai
Jerimalai submitted by bat400 : Jerimalai Rock Shelter on East Timor. Photo courtesy Sue O'Connor, Australian National University. This photo has been reproduced as part of news stories, including Discovery Magazine, http://discovermagazine.com/2012/apr/08-worlds-oldest-deep-sea-fishermen (Vote or comment on this photo)
Cave or Rock Shelter in East Timor.
The remains found in Jerimalai Rock Shelter are the oldest evidence of occupation by modern humans on the islands that were the stepping stones from South-East Asia to Australia. People lived there at least 42 000 years ago.

These finds may indicate the specific route of modern humans who pioneered the the route to Austrailia. Approximately 50000 years ago, low ocean levels created a continental shelf, Sunda, creating a contiguous land mass where southeast Asia now lies. But Sahul, the contenental extension of the current Austrailia and New Guinea did not connect to Sunda, so the modern humans were still forced to island hop as they moved farther south. East Timor was one of the Sunda islands.

The people who lived at Jerimalei ate turtles, tuna, and giant rats. Their stone tools, fishhooks, worked shells remain.

Note: The location given is for the general area and does not reflect the specific location of the rock shelter.

Sources:
Sue O'Connor (Australian National University), "New evidence from East Timor contributes to our understanding of earliest modern human colonisation east of the Sunda Shelf", Antiquity, Volume: 81 Number: 313 and "Long-term obsidian use at the Jerimalai rock shelter in East Timor", Archaeology in Oceania, vol. 46, no. 2.

Deborah Smith, "Timor cave may reveal how humans reached Australia" , and "Cave find a stepping stone back to early man".

Note: World’s Oldest 
Deep-Sea Fishermen, see comment.
You may be viewing yesterday's version of this page. To see the most up to date information please register for a free account.


Do not use the above information on other web sites or publications without permission of the contributor.

Nearby Images from Flickr
080518 Binagua-Valu Beach 52
080518 Binagua-Valu Beach 50
080518 Binagua-Valu Beach 49

The above images may not be of the site on this page, but were taken nearby. They are loaded from Flickr so please click on them for image credits.


Click here to see more info for this site

Nearby sites

Click here to view sites on an interactive map of the area

Key: Red: member's photo, Blue: 3rd party photo, Yellow: other image, Green: no photo - please go there and take one, Grey: site destroyed

Download sites to:
KML (Google Earth)
GPX (GPS waypoints)
CSV (Garmin/Navman)
CSV (Excel)

To unlock full downloads you need to sign up as a Contributory Member. Otherwise downloads are limited to 50 sites.


Turn off the page maps and other distractions

Nearby sites listing. In the following links * = Image available
 654.5km S 186° Kalumburu Cave or Rock Shelter
 690.7km W 265° Bena Village Megaliths* Ancient Village or Settlement
 748.8km W 268° Liang Bua Cave Cave or Rock Shelter
 753.5km WSW 258° Rindi Umalulu Burial Chamber or Dolmen
 753.6km S 184° Drysdale River National Park Rock Art
 766.2km SE 133° Kakadu* Rock Art
 767.1km SE 126° Kakadu - Ubirr* Rock Art
 769.9km SE 127° Kakadu - Madjedbebe* Cave or Rock Shelter
 833.2km ESE 121° Nawarla Gabarnmung rock art site Rock Art
 853.3km W 261° Anakalang Burial Chamber or Dolmen
 869.7km W 260° Waikabubak East Burial Chamber or Dolmen
 872.1km W 260° Waikabubak Burial Chamber or Dolmen
 897.0km NE 56° Bitsyari Bay, West Papua* Rock Art
 918.7km WNW 294° Leang Leang Rock Art
 935.8km WNW 292° Maros (Sulawesi) Rock Art
 1009.7km NW 306° Londa Tana Toraja Rock Cut Tomb
 1010.1km NW 306° Ke´te Kesu´ Standing Stones* Stone Circle
 1014.2km NW 307° Batu-Batu Standing Stones Standing Stones
 1014.2km NW 307° Bori Kalimbuang* Stone Circle
 1033.1km NW 305° Pali Standing Stones* Standing Stones
 1063.6km NW 313° Bada Valley Megaliths* Sculptured Stone
 1080.2km NW 315° Situs Pekasele* Sculptured Stone
 1199.4km S 177° Wolf Creek Crater Natural Stone / Erratic / Other Natural Feature
 1297.9km W 269° Pura Besakih Ancient Temple
 1313.1km W 269° Gunung Kawi* Ancient Temple
View more nearby sites and additional images

<< Cow and woman found in Cambridgeshire Anglo-Saxon dig

New evidence supporting theory of 13,000 year old extraterrestrial impact found >>

Please add your thoughts on this site

Prehistoric Britain

Prehistoric Britain

Sponsors

Auto-Translation (Google)

Translate from English into:

"Jerimalai" | Login/Create an Account | 2 News and Comments
  
Go back to top of page    Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
Our ancestors mastered deep-sea fishing 42,000 years ago by bat400 on Tuesday, 26 June 2012
(User Info | Send a Message)
A team of Australian experts have uncovered evidence of the practice in a small cave at the eastern end of East Timor, north of Australia, which contained the bones of more than 2,800 fish.

Some were caught as long as 42,000 years ago. Fish bones and hooks at the excavation site in an East Timor cave, which showed prehistoric humans were adept at catching fast-moving fish in deep water

They also found the world's earliest recorded fish hook, made of shell and dating from between 23,000 and 16,000 years ago, during excavations at the Jerimalai cave site.

Sue O'Connor (Austrailian National University) said it demonstrated prehistoric man had high-level maritime skills, and by implication, the technology needed to make the ocean crossings to reach Australia.

'What the site in East Timor has shown us is that early modern humans in Southeast Asia had amazingly advanced maritime skills.



'They were expert at catching the types of fish that would be challenging even today - fish like tuna. It's a very exciting find.'

Tuna can be caught using nets or by trawling hooks on long lines through the sea. But this can be tricky even by today's standards

She added that the finds may shed light on how Australia's first inhabitants arrived on the continent, with the implication that seaworthy boats would have been used to fish in the deep ocean.



Also thanks to coldrum for a similar story. Read more from the article by Simon Tomlinson at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech.

[ Reply to This ]

Over 40,000 years ago, ancient Australians were using sophisticated equipment to brin by bat400 on Tuesday, 26 June 2012
(User Info | Send a Message)
One of the earliest signs of advanced maritime skill, deep-sea fishing has been tenuously traced back roughly 12,000 years. Now an archaeologist has lengthened that timeline another 30,000 years.

The researcher, Sue O’Connor of Australian National University, began her search on an island off the northern coast of Australia where colonizers from Asia are thought to have landed. O’Connor had already found early fishing technology in the area, so when local hunters led her to a nearby limestone cave, she wondered whether it had once sheltered ancient mariners.

One month later she and a team of farmers had recovered some 10,000 bits of stone, bone, and shell. The deepest, oldest layers of sediment had hardened, yielding chunks with artifacts studding their surfaces.

O’Connor brought the slabs to her lab and treated them with acetic acid, which coaxed out thousands more fish bones. Many of the oldest belonged to tuna, sharks, and other fast, deep-swimming fish that could not have been brought to the cave without boats and sophisticated equipment. O’Connor was startled to find that these remains dated to 42,000 years ago, the earliest evidence of deep-sea fishermen on record: “We knew we had a really big fishing story.”



Thanks to coldrum for the link. See more in the article by Emily Elert in discovermagazine.com and the paper by Sue O’Connor, Rintaro Ono, Chris Clarkson,
"Pelagic Fishing at 42,000 Years Before the Present and the Maritime Skills of Modern Humans", Science 25 November 2011
.
[ Reply to This ]

Your Name: Anonymous [ Register Now ]
Subject:


Add your comment or contribution to this page. Spam or offensive posts are deleted immediately, don't even bother

<<< What is five plus one as a number? (Please type the answer to this question in the little box on the left)
You can also embed videos and other things. For Youtube please copy and paste the 'embed code'.
For Google Street View please include Street View in the text.
Create a web link like this: <a href="https://www.megalithic.co.uk">This is a link</a>  

Allowed HTML is:
<p> <b> <i> <a> <img> <em> <br> <strong> <blockquote> <tt> <li> <ol> <ul> <object> <param> <embed> <iframe>

We would like to know more about this location. Please feel free to add a brief description and any relevant information in your own language.
Wir möchten mehr über diese Stätte erfahren. Bitte zögern Sie nicht, eine kurze Beschreibung und relevante Informationen in Deutsch hinzuzufügen.
Nous aimerions en savoir encore un peu sur les lieux. S'il vous plaît n'hesitez pas à ajouter une courte description et tous les renseignements pertinents dans votre propre langue.
Quisieramos informarnos un poco más de las lugares. No dude en añadir una breve descripción y otros datos relevantes en su propio idioma.