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Animated Short Subject. Leaping Goats from 3000 BC Iran. by bat400 on Friday, 14 March 2008

Long considered a modern invention, animation has apparently been lying about its age. A 5,200-year-old bowl found in Iran’s Burnt City in the 1970s features a series of five images that researchers have only recently identified as being sequential, much like those in a zoetrope. Giving the bowl a spin, one would see a goat leaping to snatch leaves from a tree.

The pottery was unearthed from a burial site by Italian archaeologists, who hadn’t noticed the special relationship between the images that adorned the circumference. That discovery was made years later by Iranian archaeologist Dr. Mansur Sadjadi, (later hired to direct the excavation of The Burnt City, located in the southeastern Iranian province of Sistan-Baluchestan.)

While no one questions the early instance of animation, researchers have been at odds over the significance of the artwork. It was originally thought to depict the goat eating from the Assyrian Tree of Life, but archaeologists now assert that it predates the Assyrian civilization by a thousand years.

For more, including the animation sequence, see Animation Magazine.

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