Mortuary figurine of a woman; 4400–4000 BC; crocodile bone s

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Mortuary figurine of a woman; 4400–4000 BC; crocodile bone s
Agnes Denes - 4000 B.C.
1973 - India ink graph on paper
45.7 x 55.9 cm - Agnes Denes and Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York
Cromeleque dos Almendres (6000-4000 BC). Évora, Alentejo, Portugal
“A young woman from Vedbaek, Denmark, buried with her baby son who had been placed on a swan's wing, c 4000 BC (Illustration Adam Brockbank)”
Egypt ❤️❤️❤️
The Brownshill Dolmen is a portal tomb and National Monument located in Ireland. Built sometime between 4000 and 3000 BC by the island’s earliest famers, little else is known about the structure because it has never been excavated. All that can really be said is that its capstone is thought to be one of the heaviest in Europe, weighing an estimated 100 tonnes. Officially listed as the Kernanstown Cromlech, it’s called the Brownshill Dolmen literally because the hill on which it sits is the same hill the Browne family once planted their estate, from which the hill takes its name.
County Sligo, Ireland
by Sam
Source | Google Maps
Rock Art at Laas Geel, Somaliland, 9.000 - 3.000 BC
Photos: Abdullah Geelah/wikimedia commons (photo at the top) Clay Gilliland (2nd row left), J McDowell (2nd row right), Vladimir Lysenko (I.)/ wikimedia commons (2 photos at the bottom)