Animal head and bird stone sculptures both in right profile view
Subjectivity in Stone Age art works such as figure stones, engravings, sculptures, effigies and curated manuports. See how images and icons have been realized in portable rock media since the dawn of humanity. Here, archaeologists and art historians are becoming aware of these forsaken artifacts. “And this our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in every thing." -in W. Shakespeare, As You Like It, 1599.
Denisovan Ancestry in East Eurasian and Native American Populations
18 February 2018
26 January 2018
21 January 2018
'Right eye open, left eye missing' carved stone head from Woodbridge, Virginia
'Right eye open, left eye missing' is a known Paleolithic rock art motif
Detailed carving work to express the right eye in its socket. The left eye is a simple removal of a chip of stone to create a slight indentation. About 50% of the surface of this face has been carved by the artist. There is a gash which appears to serve as a chin cleft on the face.
21 December 2017
Human head sculpture with face mask in Middle Paleolithic 'one eye missing' motif
Adam Arkfeld find, site #44FK731, Clear Brook, Virginia
Note how the right eye is expressed as convex, or in bas releif, while the left eye is a large, concave excavation. This differentiates the conditions of the two eyes.
02 December 2017
Human head left profile, a water bird in flight and a standing bird figure- all in quartzite found this week at Arkfeld site
Adam Arkfeld finds, site #44FK731, Clear Brook, Virginia
'Water bird in flight'
(wing on the down stroke)
'Sitting bird'
15 November 2017
A microlithic owl figure from a new Kansas portable rock art site (with 2nd bird nested on its left side)
'Owl figure'
Timothy Banninger find, Kansas
There is a small face realized on the owl's face below its left eye. This face figure is worked to expose the two stone inclusions as 'eyes' with added retouch to make a nose and mouth.
I contend this is the face of a bird at the eye and beak of the owl. It has a fully expressed body of a bird in profile. This is a motif developed in other examples on this blog.
07 November 2017
New Western Montana portable rock art site has a dramatic natural backdrop
'Owl sculpture'
Wade Holmes finds and collection, Western Montana
This is a classic, simple Paleolithic owl sculpture made with a minimal amount of work but invoking the essential imagery for recognition. The context of all the other figurative art from this site supports the interpretation of an intentionally sculpted owl on this obviously worked cobble.
Summer Solstice sunset view from the Wade Homes portable rock art site
'Feline bust in profile facing right'
'Feline face looking straight on'
Feline depicted with 'one eye open, other closed or missing.' Ken Johnston illustration of carved elliptical right eye and left eye made by a straight incised line.
Wade Holmes interpretation of a worked stone resembling the head of a mammoth as if being viewed straight on. Wade's drawing provides a visual context for his interpretation. There are indeed two 'eyes' on this figure. Ken Johnston illustration of possible hand-hold on this object. Some figures like this may have been held in the hand like toys, or puppets or story-telling props.
A couple of mammoths with interpretations by Wade Holmes
'Mammoth facing right with prominent tusk representation'
Eye, tusk and trunk line illustrated by Ken Johnston
At left is a 'sleeping water bird' sculpture and at right a 'mammoth' sculpture. The water bird has a beautifully curved neck, its head tucked into its back feathers and has a tail and wing details. The mammoth, which is in profile facing left, may also be interpreted as a lion head facing right, where the mammoth and lion share the same 'ear' and the dark spot toward the top-middle edge is the lion's eye. Many examples of this 'mammoth/lion facing away from each other' motif have been described on this blog and it will eventually prove to be one of the great sculpture types of Paleolithic North America.
An animal-like figure with evidence of human-directed bashing and marking
26 October 2017
Standing human head statue from Arkfeld Site, #44FK731, Clear Brook, Virginia
Human head statue
Arkfeld Site
Based on other examples on this blog human head renderings which are often quite lite on details sometimes have what appear to be manufactured 'nostrils' of the nose as seen in this example recovered by Adam Arkfeld at his site. They seem to be an important detail which I have proposed may be adding a 'symbolic breath of life' and animation to the stone.
View of the sculpture from the opposite side. Note the vein of quartz crystals which probably helped inspire the selection of the raw material here by the sculptor. Other examples of sculptures appear to have an unnatural 'lean' to one side, like this one appears leaning back, to the left.
14 October 2017
A bust sculpture in flint from the Island of Oleron, France
Henri Valenti find, Island of Oleron, France
Hello from the island of Oleron. Bust of a man of 6/4 cm in flint found on the island. His headdress and beard are well seen in the imagery of prehistoric man.
Best regards
Henri
Two human face visages, one looking straight on and a profile as if looking to the right. Note the shared 'eye' element in the two figures.
"View of profile of the bust and limestone mask naturally pierced but undergoes some retouches. On can be observed the absence of the left eye. 6cm / 4cm"
23 September 2017
Two British anthropomorphic Paleolithic worked stones with similar nose representations
United Kingdom, private collection, Lower Paleolithic

Anthropomorphic flint nodule with similar stylized 'nose' representation
21 September 2017
Western Montana portable rock art patterns documented
Wade Holmes find, western Montana
As I mentioned before, I have found many 100's of stones that are peculiar, and look like they represent many different animals. I was not aware of this sort of rock art until I began searching for stones similar to what I have found on the internet. The first style I recognized was the sleeping bird stones, then the non-sleeping birds.
After that I began noticing that many of the stones seemed to represent elephants.
After viewing all of the stones you have on your site I am fairly certain that I have found a large cache of these stones. Many stones are naturally shaped, but they are found with many other stones that show signs of being worked by someone, so I believe they still represent something.
Regards,
Wade
Having seen good photographs of Wade's finds, I agree that he has found a concentration of 'portable rock art' similar to that described by many other careful observers. His description of the 'sleeping bird' motif is an indicator he has detected a Paleolithic rock art site. I will be featuring some of Wade's artifacts in the coming weeks.
Based on its find context and other examples for reference it is my contention that most if not all of the facial elements (eyes, nose, mouth, teeth) on the pebble featured here are the result of human marking rock art behaviors which have not been described by North American archaeologists.
A competent and thorough petrological examination of examples like this can confirm human workmanship and so easily establish what must become a major new line of rock art inquiry for archaeological science.
23 August 2017
Sculpted bust in left profile perspective from The Old Route 66 Zoo Site, #23JP1222
'Smiling left portrait with cheeky jaw'
16 August 2017
Big cat head sculpture with eye perforation from Arkfeld Site, Virginia, includes human face mask
'Lion head left profile sculpture with perforation as eye'
Adam Arkfeld find, Site #44FK731
This large sculpture weighs several hundred pounds. It is made in a typical artistic template or scheme which is seen in other North American cat head sculptures and which must have been culturally facilitated. This template is seen on boulder-size pieces like this to smaller 2-5cm examples. Eye, nose, mouth, chin, ear and jaw line are depicted here.
Cat eye
There is a 'human face mask' carved in relief in the lower right corner of the cat head.
26 July 2017
'Flying foot' imagery from Arkfeld Site Paleolithic times in similar motif to ancient Greek god Hermes
'Flying foot' interpreted by Adam Arkfeld
The Arkfeld Site, #44FK732, Clear Brook, Virginia
The side view of the 'foot' has a distinct bird-in-flight-like form. It also resembles the NASA Space Shuttles in profile view. Based on this and evidence of toes on the foot worked to relative anatomical accuracy led Arkfeld to this astute interpretation.
Arkfeld notes the 'flying foot' motif is seen in the case of the Greek god Hermes
Closer view of top of foot
Toes illustrated
View of front of the foot
Close up view of the toes on the front of the foot
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