Schweizersbild

Paleolithic rock shelter in Switzerland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Schweizersbild is a rock shelter from the Paleolithic period, located in the municipality of Schaffhausen in Switzerland, at the foot of a southeast-facing cliff near a spring. Beneath the natural rock overhang, remains of a significant Upper Paleolithic (Magdalenian) habitation (camp) dating to approximately 15,000–12,700 BC were discovered.[1][2]

Coordinates47°43′25.95″N 8°38′23.67″E
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Schweizersbild
Schweizersbild is located in Switzerland
Schweizersbild
Schweizersbild
Location in Switzerland
Schweizersbild is located in Canton of Schaffhausen
Schweizersbild
Schweizersbild
Location in the canton of Schaffhausen
LocationSchaffhausen, Switzerland
Coordinates47°43′25.95″N 8°38′23.67″E
TypeRock shelter
History
PeriodsUpper Paleolithic (Magdalenian)
Site notes
Excavation dates1891–1893
ArchaeologistsJakob Nüesch
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Discovery and excavations

Excavations in 1892

The site was discovered in 1891 by Jakob Nüesch [de], who conducted archaeological excavations there from 1891 to 1893. Beneath a gray archaeological layer containing remains from post-Paleolithic periods (including Neolithic tombs)[3] were the habitation levels from the Upper Paleolithic. Below this, a layer containing rodent remains but practically no artifacts covered a bed of Ice Age pebbles.[1] Some of the smaller skeletons have initially been interpreted as the remains of pygmies,[4] but they may rather represent shorter individuals.[5]

Stratigraphy

Model of the habitation at the Allerheiligen Museum

The stratigraphy cannot be reconstructed with certainty. Lower down, a second layer of rodent debris also contained remains of collared lemming, Arctic fox, reindeer, wild horse, mountain hare, as well as a rib fragment from a woolly rhinoceros. Above this, a yellow archaeological layer yielded primarily bones of reindeer, wild horse, mountain hare, and red deer. In this layer, a hearth and a flint knapping workshop were also observed.[1]

Artifacts

The artifacts uncovered by the excavators include several hundred tools made of flint (including shouldered points), bone, and antler (notably double-beveled spear points, harpoons, awls, perforated batons, needles, and ornaments).[1]

Paleolithic art

The Schweizersbild site is especially known for the pieces of Paleolithic mobiliary art discovered there, notably a slate plaquette engraved on both sides with animal figures and a perforated baton made of reindeer antler depicting two wild horses in a line.[6] The engravings are more stylized than those from objects found at Kesslerloch, and executed with a more fluid line. A small jet statuette representing a woman, found in 1954 in the spoil from Nüesch's excavation, is less well known.[1] The original is exhibited at the Museum of Cultures (Basel).

See also

References

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