This Wooden Sculpture Is Twice as Old as Stonehenge and the Pyramids [View all]
New findings about the 12,500-year-old Shigir Idol have major implications for the study of prehistory

Hunter-gatherers in what is now Russia likely viewed the wooden sculpture as an artwork imbued with ritual significance. (Sverdlovsk Regional Museum)
By Nora McGreevy
SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
MARCH 24, 2021
Gold prospectors first discovered the so-called Shigir Idol at the bottom of a peat bog in Russias Ural mountain range in 1890. The unique objecta nine-foot-tall totem pole composed of ten wooden fragments carved with expressive faces, eyes and limbs and decorated with geometric patternsrepresents the oldest known surviving work of wooden ritual art in the world.
More than a century after its discovery, archaeologists continue to uncover surprises about this astonishing artifact. As Thomas Terberger, a scholar of prehistory at Göttingen University in Germany, and his colleagues wrote in the journal Quaternary International in January, new research suggests the sculpture is 900 years older than previously thought.
Based on extensive analysis, Terbergers team now estimates that the object was likely crafted about 12,500 years ago, at the end of the Last Ice Age. Its ancient creators carved the work from a single larch tree with 159 growth rings, the authors write in the study.
The idol was carved during an era of great climate change, when early forests were spreading across a warmer late glacial to postglacial Eurasia, Terberger tells Franz Lidz of the New York Times. The landscape changed, and the artfigurative designs and naturalistic animals painted in caves and carved in rockdid, too, perhaps as a way to help people come to grips with the challenging environments they encountered.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/earliest-surviving-wood-sculpture-even-older-previously-thought-180977320/