digital photograph(colour)
- Museum number
- 2013,2034.5860
- Description
-
Digital photograph (colour); view of mountainous landscape. Foreground: hole prepared for the excavation of a well and unidentified person. Background: stream and rocky outcrops. Oukaïmeden valley, Morocco.
Scanned
- Production date
-
28 November 2005 (date digitized)
-
March 1998 (original photograph)
- Dimensions
-
File size: 120 megabytes
-
Resolution: 300 dots per inch
- Curator's comments
- The photograph shows the Oukaïmeden valley, in the Moroccan High Atlas, a mountain range that extends across the northwestern stretch of North Africa, including Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. The highest peaks are placed in Morocco, reaching more than 4000 meters and being the highest in North Africa. Throughout the years, thousands of rock art engravings have been discovered around three areas: the Oukaïmeden valley, the Yagour plateau and Jbel Rat. The engravings of the High Atlas Mountains are stylistically different from those to the south, showing animals, weapons and human figures but with almost no examples of Tazina, Cattle (Pastoral), Horse and Camel periods common in the Sahara rock art traditions. Some of the engravings –as halberds- have been interpreted as depictions of archaeologically known weapons and dated in the Bronze Age.
Research in the High Atlas is relatively modern and only started after the Second World War. The first works were made by Jean Malhomme, who published a corpus of two volumes in 1959, and went on in the 1980s and 1990s, when Alain Rodrigue published several articles that ended in a comprehensive study in 1999.
- Location
- Not on display
- Acquisition date
- 2013
- Department
- Africa, Oceania and the Americas
- Registration number
- 2013,2034.5860
- Additional IDs
-
Previous owner/ex-collection number: MORATM0130005 (TARA number)