12,000-Year-Old Clay Figurine Reveals Ancient Storytelling Roots

Bruce ⁤Bower 2025-11-17 20:00:00

A roughly 12,000-year-old clay figurine unearthed in ⁣northern Israel has ‌unveiled a surprisingly ancient ⁢turning point in storytelling and artistic techniques.

This tiny item, which fits in the palm of an adult’s ‍hand, represents the oldest known figurine ⁢to ‍depict an encounter between a human and a nonhuman‍ animal, say archaeologist Laurent Davin of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and colleagues. Meticulous sculpting captured a mythological scene involving a goose⁤ and a woman,⁢ the scientists report November 17 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

An ancient natufian figurine,left,depicts a goose hunched over⁢ a woman’s back. An artist’s reconstruction of the ‍figurine, right, shows ⁣the two figures ​in detail.© Laurent DavinAn ancient Natufian figurine, left, depicts a goose hunched‍ over a woman’s back. An​ artist’s reconstruction of the figurine, ⁢right, shows the two figures in detail.© Laurent Davin

Davin’s group reassembled the figurine from three pieces found in a stone structure at a Natufian site called Nahal Ein Gev II. Natufians, whose culture‌ ran from about 15,000 to 11,500 years⁣ ago, lived year-round in villages, hunted a⁤ variety of animals (including ​geese) and gathered wild cereals.

Despite their settled lifestyle, Natufians ​did not grow crops. Researchers have frequently enough ⁤assumed that figurines displaying people and animals imbued with‌ symbolic meanings first appeared in farming villages.

The figurine shows a crouching goose on a ​woman’s back. The⁤ bird’s wings encircle the ⁤woman’s upper body. Its head and beak nestle against the‌ side of her face.

Davin’s team suspects it ⁤shows an imagined or mythical mating ‌of ​a male goose with a woman. Beliefs in spiritual connections⁤ between humans and ⁢other animals, and depictions of cross-species encounters including mating, characterized many farming communities as early as around 9,000 years ago, and also historical hunter-gatherer societies, the researchers ‍say.

The diminutive ⁤discovery at ​Nahal Ein Gev II demonstrates that naturalistic depictions of people and various creatures reflecting spiritual beliefs “started earlier than previously thought,” Davin says. “Clay might have been a medium ‌that facilitated such new expressions.”

A man points to a tiny clay figurine ‌that sits on ⁢top ‌of a sheet of white paper as a woman looks on.
Archaeologists Laurent Davin, left, and Leore Grosman peer at their diminutive discovery.They, along with zooarchaeologist Natalie Munro, say the figure reveals a pivotal shift in ancient storytelling.© Hadas Goldgeier

Whoever sculpted the Natufian figurine intended ⁢it to be viewed from​ above and at an⁣ angle, ⁢so that light — from the sun or a fireplace — and resulting shadows created a sense of viewing a 3-D ⁤interaction, Davin says.

Perhaps a shaman or another ritual specialist used the Natufian figurine to trigger supernatural visions or conduct rituals,Davin‌ speculates.​ Previous excavations uncovered ‍ a Natufian shaman’s grave at a cave near Nahal Ein Gev II.

A few ‌examples of cave art older⁣ than the Natufian figurine show human-animal⁢ interactions, including a ⁣nearly 44,000-year-old hunting scene in Indonesia. But the ancient clay portrayal⁢ of fowl⁤ and female took mythological artistry⁤ and storytelling into a new realm, Davin says.

Leave a Comment