Yes, I agree with you there, and I see those sorts of faulty analysis all of the time.Tiompan wrote: It happens all the time the most common motifs in rock art from all periods and in all parts of the world get over interpreted by those with little knowledge of rock art but do have an agenda . The over interpretations suits suit their interests whilst ignoring that bias, context, the corpus, ethnography and the what serious researchers have to say . Most researchers just shrug their shoulders and ignore it .
In the early 1970's I saw what I thought was one of the finest books on the rock art of the desert southwest of North America, in which the author used the correlation of symbols with features to establish their meaning. I sure do wish I could remember that book's name and author, so that I could check his "readings" with the known mesoamerican logograms.
You may want to watch this video by Fletcher Wilson and myself on Adena petroglphs:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_WiQCvt4OGs
Of course, I think we did a splendid job with them.
I think my "reading" is far better than his.Tiompan wrote: We have covered the motifs a few times now.
“Look at what you omitted from the site from which you linked the pics. The author suggests “I can tell you that the strange loops with dots in them on stone c look like humans depicted from above in Australian Aboriginal art. The ‘u’ shapes represent the legs or arms of someone sitting cross legged on the ground, and the dot inside the head.”
I am very reluctant to use my scarce archaeo-astronomical resource, Fletcher, to work on Gobekli Tepe, when we have at hand so many Native American sites and artifacts which need work, but I suppose we'll have to. When I get back to Ohio, and his best computer gets back from the shop, perhaps we'll take a weekend for a first look at the Gobekli Tepe site.Tiompan wrote: That is as good as place to start as any, in that it is unlikely anyone is going to depict the Draconids in the southern hemisphere, further we have the ethnography of producers of the symbols to tell us their meaning and they never mention the Draconids, probably because they are not as visible as other showers like the Quadrantids ,which are not deoicted either.
It should provide information for Native American analysis.
The 2 [TWO] Holocene Start Impact Events have been demonstrated by very hard data.
The problem now is identifying the source comet.
Every meteor stream will have to be looked at.
If Fletcher were on the ground for one night with clear skies on the ground at the Gobekli Tepe site, (okay, maybe two or three nights)
the interpretation of any possible astronomical alignments would be done.
It's really quite remarkable to watch him do time shifts for the ancient night skies shifts in his head...
I think my "readings" of the PPN B inscribed stone artifacts are pretty objective.Tiompan wrote: One of the classics of Australian symbolism is Nancy D .Munn’s “Walibiri Iconography: Graphic Representation and cultural symbolism in a cenrtral Australian society “ The arcs ,which are found in nearly all areas where rock art is to be found usually represent actors , often human but they can be animals e.g. oppossums , the dots can represent head as she suggests or increase i.e. plularity . Exactly the same symbol complete with ethnographic explanation and with no possibility of the the interpretation being the Draconids . Arcs and dots are some of the basic forms used world wide in rock art and symbols ,they can represent many things depending on the culture that is doing the representing .
the point is that you can make up any old BS and suggest what you like but some things are going to be much less likely than others.
One point about Pareidolia is that it tells us much more about the person, and their obsessions, doing the "interpreting " than the actual subject . “
“We have been over the interpretation of these markings before ,as is often the case the “interpretation”, like a rorschach test ,
tells us more about the personal obsessions of the interpreter than the actual markings .
As you yourself pointed out, you have to "read" rock art or inscribed stone objects in the context of the culture that produced them.Tiompan wrote:
What you see as a comet is a phosphene form and one of the most common symbols used in rock art and prehistoric engravings the world over.
It’s present on all four of the stone objects, and, as is also common, there are often multiple examples together. In this case two of the stones have three, but often there are many more .
It is usually referred as a serpentiform or when more angular simply a zig zag , neither of which look like a comet or are similar to actual depictions of comets.
In some cases they may represent a serpent/snake but there are countless other interpretations from different cultures e.g. water ,life force ,smoke , lightning etc and very often it is purely decorative.
As noted earlier there is a similar explanation for the arcs ,which are also phosphenes ,found all over the world in all periods of rock art and
have multiple possible explanations including ethnographic ones which don’t mention meteor showers . “
Still no mention of names for the Oxford and Cambridge archaeoastronomers who were silent on the Edinburgh nonsense .
But they also need to be viewed as a whole, and in their own context.
As I pointed out above, the serpent in spear straightener A has an entirely different "meaning" than the serpent on plaque C.
The serpentine glyger on plaque C has to be "read" in the context of the other symbols shown on it.
So in the end, while this paper is deficient in the ways we have discussed,
it does represent a first attempt.
BTW, if you have any "friends" who work with mesoamerican materials, would you please send them over to the New World section here?