1 00:00:01,067 --> 00:00:03,319 There's something about caves. 2 00:00:04,805 --> 00:00:08,822 A shadowy opening in a limestone cliff that draws you in. 3 00:00:10,006 --> 00:00:13,568 As you pass through the portal between light and dark, 4 00:00:13,568 --> 00:00:15,982 you enter a subterranean world. 5 00:00:16,229 --> 00:00:21,701 A place of perpetual gloom, of earthy smells, of hushed silence. 6 00:00:22,793 --> 00:00:24,491 Long ago in Europe, 7 00:00:24,491 --> 00:00:27,388 ancient people also entered these underground worlds. 8 00:00:27,901 --> 00:00:29,374 As witness to their passage, 9 00:00:29,374 --> 00:00:32,415 they left behind mysterious engravings and paintings. 10 00:00:32,986 --> 00:00:39,324 Like this panel of humans, triangles and zig-zags from Ojo GuareƱa in Spain. 11 00:00:40,184 --> 00:00:43,156 You now walk the same path as these early artists. 12 00:00:44,038 --> 00:00:46,926 And in this surreal, other-worldly place, 13 00:00:46,926 --> 00:00:49,220 it's almost possible to imagine 14 00:00:49,220 --> 00:00:53,573 that you hear the muffled foot-fall of skin boots on soft earth, 15 00:00:53,573 --> 00:00:56,762 or that you see the flickering of a torch around the next bend. 16 00:00:57,946 --> 00:00:59,456 When I'm in a cave, 17 00:00:59,456 --> 00:01:05,299 I often find myself wondering, what drove these people to go so deep? 18 00:01:05,299 --> 00:01:08,882 To brave dangerous and narrow passageways to leave their mark? 19 00:01:09,420 --> 00:01:10,441 In this video clip, 20 00:01:10,674 --> 00:01:13,692 that was shot half a kilometer, or about a third of a mile underground, 21 00:01:13,924 --> 00:01:15,898 in the cave of Curon in Spain, 22 00:01:16,200 --> 00:01:18,150 we found a series of red paintings on a ceiling 23 00:01:18,429 --> 00:01:20,913 in a previously unexplored section of the cave. 24 00:01:21,378 --> 00:01:25,487 As we crawled forward, military-style, with the ceiling getting ever-lower, 25 00:01:25,766 --> 00:01:28,552 we finally got to a point where the ceiling was so low, 26 00:01:28,947 --> 00:01:31,269 that my husband and project photographer, Dylan, 27 00:01:31,524 --> 00:01:35,193 could no longer achieve focus on the ceiling with his DSLR camera. 28 00:01:35,727 --> 00:01:37,004 So while he filmed me, 29 00:01:37,329 --> 00:01:40,533 I kept following the trail of red paint with a single light, 30 00:01:40,835 --> 00:01:44,434 and a point-and-shoot camera that we kept for that type of occasion. 31 00:01:45,920 --> 00:01:47,870 Half a kilometer underground. 32 00:01:48,288 --> 00:01:49,681 Seriously. 33 00:01:50,192 --> 00:01:53,095 What was somebody doing down there with a torturous stone lamp? 34 00:01:53,373 --> 00:01:54,395 (Laugher) 35 00:01:54,627 --> 00:01:56,392 I mean --me, it makes sense, right? 36 00:01:56,694 --> 00:01:57,924 But you know, 37 00:01:58,133 --> 00:02:00,896 this is the kind of question that I'm trying to answer with my research. 38 00:02:01,361 --> 00:02:03,775 I study some of the oldest art in the world. 39 00:02:04,751 --> 00:02:06,933 It was created by these early artists in Europe, 40 00:02:07,305 --> 00:02:09,603 between 10 thousand and 40 thousand years ago. 41 00:02:11,864 --> 00:02:12,932 And the thing is, 42 00:02:12,932 --> 00:02:15,094 is that I'm not just studying it because it's beautiful, 43 00:02:15,327 --> 00:02:17,230 though some of it certainly is. 44 00:02:17,834 --> 00:02:21,410 But what I'm interested in is the development of the modern mind, 45 00:02:21,735 --> 00:02:26,332 of the evolution of creativity, of imagination, of abstract thought. 46 00:02:26,890 --> 00:02:29,838 About what it means to be human. 47 00:02:31,417 --> 00:02:34,389 While all species communicate in one way or another, 48 00:02:34,738 --> 00:02:37,802 only we humans have really taken it to another level. 49 00:02:38,197 --> 00:02:40,589 Our desire and ability to share and collaborate, 50 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:43,305 has been a huge part of out success story. 51 00:02:43,584 --> 00:02:47,856 Our modern world is based on a global network of information exchange. 52 00:02:48,251 --> 00:02:51,896 Made possible, in large part, by our ability to communicate. 53 00:02:52,361 --> 00:02:56,076 In particular, using graphic or written forms of communication. 54 00:02:56,772 --> 00:02:58,142 The thing is though, 55 00:02:58,421 --> 00:03:00,441 that we've been building on the mental achievements 56 00:03:00,766 --> 00:03:03,042 of those that came before us for so long, 57 00:03:03,645 --> 00:03:07,848 that it's easy to forget that certain abilities haven't already existed. 58 00:03:08,870 --> 00:03:10,866 It's one of the things I find most fascinating 59 00:03:11,308 --> 00:03:13,931 about studying our deep history. 60 00:03:14,210 --> 00:03:18,064 Those people didn't have the shoulders of any giants to stand on, 61 00:03:18,320 --> 00:03:20,177 they were the original shoulders. 62 00:03:20,781 --> 00:03:23,289 And while a surprising number of important inventions 63 00:03:23,590 --> 00:03:25,309 come out of that distant time, 64 00:03:25,727 --> 00:03:30,254 what I want to talk to you about today is the invention of graphic communication. 65 00:03:31,020 --> 00:03:33,180 There are three main types of communication, 66 00:03:33,458 --> 00:03:36,314 spoken, gestural -- so things like sign language, 67 00:03:36,639 --> 00:03:38,892 and graphic communication. 68 00:03:39,217 --> 00:03:42,235 Spoken and gestural are, by their very nature, ephemeral. 69 00:03:42,607 --> 00:03:45,997 It requires close contact for a message to be sent and received. 70 00:03:46,484 --> 00:03:50,292 And after the moment of transmission, it's gone forever. 71 00:03:50,571 --> 00:03:53,729 Graphic communication, on the other hand, decouples that relationship, 72 00:03:54,402 --> 00:03:57,838 and with its invention, it became possible for the first time, 73 00:03:58,396 --> 00:04:01,043 for a message to be transmitted and preserved, 74 00:04:01,461 --> 00:04:04,200 beyond a single moment in place and time. 75 00:04:05,059 --> 00:04:06,685 Europe is one of the first places 76 00:04:06,917 --> 00:04:09,564 that we start to see graphic marks regularly appearing 77 00:04:09,866 --> 00:04:13,697 in caves, rock shelters, and even a few surviving open air sites. 78 00:04:14,533 --> 00:04:16,948 But this is not the Europe we know today. 79 00:04:17,296 --> 00:04:19,920 This was a world dominated by towering ice sheets 80 00:04:20,175 --> 00:04:22,195 by towering ice sheets, three to four kilometers high, 81 00:04:22,497 --> 00:04:25,214 with sweeping grass plains and frozen tundra. 82 00:04:25,492 --> 00:04:27,535 This was the Ice Age. 83 00:04:28,325 --> 00:04:29,509 Over the last century, 84 00:04:29,765 --> 00:04:33,990 more than 350 Ice Age rock art sites have been found across the continent. 85 00:04:34,942 --> 00:04:39,261 Decorated with animals, abstract shapes, and even the occasional human. 86 00:04:39,516 --> 00:04:42,605 Like these engraved figures from Grotta dell'Addaura in Sicily. 87 00:04:43,092 --> 00:04:46,064 They provide us with a rare glimpse 88 00:04:46,320 --> 00:04:50,081 into the creative world and imagination of these early artists. 89 00:04:50,332 --> 00:04:51,539 Since their discovery, 90 00:04:51,818 --> 00:04:54,999 it's been the animals that have received the majority of the study. 91 00:04:55,556 --> 00:04:58,458 Like this black horse from ( TBD ), Spain. 92 00:04:58,876 --> 00:05:02,824 Or this unusual purple bison from La Pasiega. 93 00:05:03,265 --> 00:05:07,560 But for me, it was the abstract shapes -- what we call geometric signs, 94 00:05:08,512 --> 00:05:10,137 that drew me to study the art. 95 00:05:11,693 --> 00:05:13,736 The funny this is, that at most sights, 96 00:05:14,015 --> 00:05:17,777 the geometric signs far outnumber the animal and human images. 97 00:05:18,334 --> 00:05:21,050 But when I started on this back in 2007, 98 00:05:21,561 --> 00:05:25,021 there wasn't even a definitive list of how many shapes there were, 99 00:05:25,439 --> 00:05:26,902 nor was there a strong sense 100 00:05:27,203 --> 00:05:29,665 of whether the same ones appeared across space or time. 101 00:05:32,428 --> 00:05:34,796 Before I could even get started on my questions, 102 00:05:35,191 --> 00:05:37,536 my first step was to compile a database 103 00:05:37,838 --> 00:05:41,088 of all known geographic signs from all of the rock art sites. 104 00:05:41,576 --> 00:05:45,175 The problem was that while they were well documented at some sites, 105 00:05:45,430 --> 00:05:47,056 usually the ones with the very nice animals, 106 00:05:47,636 --> 00:05:51,096 there was also a large number of them where it was very vague -- 107 00:05:51,374 --> 00:05:53,023 there wasn't a lot of description or detail. 108 00:05:53,433 --> 00:05:56,057 Some of them hadn't been visited in half a century, or more. 109 00:05:56,777 --> 00:05:59,749 These were the ones that I targeted for my field work. 110 00:06:00,236 --> 00:06:02,024 Over the course of two years, 111 00:06:02,628 --> 00:06:06,854 my faithful husband Dylan and I each spent over 300 hours underground, 112 00:06:07,318 --> 00:06:10,917 hiking, crawling and wriggling around 52 sites 113 00:06:11,312 --> 00:06:14,191 in France, Spain, Portugal and Sicily. 114 00:06:14,493 --> 00:06:15,770 And it was totally worth it. 115 00:06:16,304 --> 00:06:21,923 We found new, undocumented geometric signs at 75 percent of the sites we visited. 116 00:06:22,782 --> 00:06:25,638 This is the level of accuracy I knew I was going to need 117 00:06:25,917 --> 00:06:28,517 if I wanted to start answering those larger questions. 118 00:06:28,982 --> 00:06:31,280 So let's get to those answers. 119 00:06:31,721 --> 00:06:36,087 Barring a handful of outliers, there are only 32 geometric signs. 120 00:06:36,388 --> 00:06:40,777 Only 32 signs 121 00:06:41,125 --> 00:06:43,308 across a 30,000 year time span, and the entire continent of Europe. 122 00:06:43,950 --> 00:06:46,457 That is a very small number. 123 00:06:46,759 --> 00:06:49,058 Now if these were random doodles or decorations, 124 00:06:49,290 --> 00:06:51,380 we would expect to see a lot more variation, 125 00:06:51,682 --> 00:06:53,887 but instead what we find are the same signs, 126 00:06:54,143 --> 00:06:56,627 repeating across both space and time. 127 00:06:57,138 --> 00:07:00,969 Some signs start out strong, before losing popularity and vanishing, 128 00:07:01,248 --> 00:07:03,616 while other signs are later inventions. 129 00:07:03,964 --> 00:07:08,446 But 65 percent of those signs stayed in use during that entire time period. 130 00:07:08,980 --> 00:07:12,718 Thigns like lines, rectangles triangles, ovals and circles. 131 00:07:13,433 --> 00:07:15,569 Like we see here, from the end of the Ice Age, 132 00:07:15,778 --> 00:07:19,028 at a 10 thousand-year-old site, high in Pyrenees Mountains. 133 00:07:19,586 --> 00:07:22,395 And while certain signs span thousands of kilometers, 134 00:07:22,813 --> 00:07:25,367 other signs had much more restricted distribution patterns, 135 00:07:25,474 --> 00:07:28,051 with some being limited to a single territory, 136 00:07:28,376 --> 00:07:30,280 like we see here with these divided rectangles 137 00:07:30,559 --> 00:07:32,626 that are only found in northern Spain, 138 00:07:32,927 --> 00:07:35,319 and what some researchers have speculated 139 00:07:35,667 --> 00:07:37,989 could be some sort of family or clan signs. 140 00:07:38,291 --> 00:07:39,614 On a side note, 141 00:07:39,893 --> 00:07:42,981 there is surprising degree similarity in the earliest rock art 142 00:07:43,260 --> 00:07:46,975 found all the way from France and Spain to Indonesia and Australia. 143 00:07:47,718 --> 00:07:51,154 With many of the same signs appearing in such far-flung places, 144 00:07:51,828 --> 00:07:54,451 especially in the 30 thousand to 40 thousand-year range, 145 00:07:54,791 --> 00:07:57,577 it's starting to seem increasingly likely 146 00:07:57,925 --> 00:08:02,081 that this invention actually traces back to a common point of origin in Africa, 147 00:08:02,639 --> 00:08:04,984 but that I'm afraid, is a subject for a future talk. 148 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So back to the matter at hand. 149 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 There could be no doubt that these signs were meaningful to their creators, 150 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 like these 25 thousand-year-old ___________ sculptures 151 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 from La Roque de Venasque in France. 152 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 We might not know what they meant but the people of the time certainly did. 153 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The repetition of the same signs, for so long, and at so many sites, 154 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 tells us that the artists were making intentional choices, 155 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 If we're talking about geometric shapes, 156 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with specific, culturally recognized, agreed upon meanings, 157 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 than we could very well be looking 158 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 at one of the oldest systems of graphic communication in the world. 159 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I'm not talking about writing yet. 160 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 There's just not enough characters at this point, 161 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to have represented all of the words in the spoken language, 162 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 something which is a requirement for a full writing system. 163 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Nor do we see the signs repeating regularly enough 164 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to suggest that they were some sort of alphabet. 165 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 But what we do have are some intriguing one-offs 166 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 like this panel from La Pasiega in Spain known as "The Inscription", 167 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with its symmetrical markings on the left, 168 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 possible stylized representations of hands in the middle, 169 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and what looks a bit like a bracket on the right. 170 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The oldest systems of graphic communication in the world -- 171 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Sumerian cuneiform, Egyptian hieroglyphs, the earliest Chinese script, 172 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 all emerged between four thousand and five thousand years ago, 173 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with each coming into existence from an earlier protosystem 174 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 made of counting marks and pictographic representations, 175 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 where the meaning and the image were the same. 176 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So a picture of a bird would really have represented that animal. 177 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It's only later that we start to see these pictographs become more stylized, 178 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 until they almost become unrecognizable. 179 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And that we also start to see 180 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 more symbols being invented to represent all those missing words in the language -- 181 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 things like pronouns, adverbs, adjectives. 182 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So knowing all this, 183 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 it seems highly unlikely the geometrics signs from Ice Age Europe 184 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 were truly abstract written characters. 185 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Instead what's much more likely 186 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 is that these early artists were also making counting marks, 187 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 maybe like this row lines from Reparo de Za Minica in Sicily, 188 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 as well as creating stylized representations 189 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 of things from the world around them. 190 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Could some of the signs be weaponry or housing? 191 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Or what about celestial objects like star constellations? 192 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Or maybe even rivers, mountains, trees-- landscape features. 193 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Possibly like this black peniform surrounded by strange bell-shaped signs 194 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 from the site of El Castillo, in Spain. 195 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The term peniform means "feather-shaped" in Latin, 196 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 but could this actually be a depiction of a plant or a tree? 197 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Some researchers have begun 198 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to ask these questions about certain signs at specific sites, 199 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 but I believe the time has come to revisit this category as a whole. 200 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The irony in all of this, of course, 201 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 is that having just carefully classified all the signs into a single category, 202 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I have a feeling that my next step will involve breaking it back apart 203 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 as different types of imagery are identified and separated off. 204 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Now don't get me wrong, 205 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 the later creation of fully-developed writing 206 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 was an impressive feat in its own right, 207 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 but it's important to remember 208 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 that those early writing systems didn't come out of a vacuum. 209 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And that even five thousand years ago, 210 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 people were already building on something much older, 211 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 with its origins stretching back tens of thousands of years -- 212 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to the geometric signs of Ice Age Europe and far beyond, 213 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 to that point, deep in our collective history, 214 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 when someone first came up with the idea of making a graphic mark, 215 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and forever changed the nature of how we communicate. 216 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Thank you. 217 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 (Applause)