Stone Age artists 'may have been pioneers of modern day cinema'

Washington, June 10 (ANI): Stone Age artists used cartoon-like techniques to give the impression of wild beasts trotting or running across cave walls, a new study has revealed.

Archaeologist Marc Azema of the University of Toulouse-Le Mirail in France and independent French artist Florent Rivere, argued that by almost around 30,000 years ago Paleolithic artists used ""animation effects" in their paintings.

To render the movement, they deconstructed it in successive images.

According to the researchers, this would explain multiple heads or limbs on some cave paintings.

"Prehistoric man foreshadowed one of the fundamental characteristics of visual perception, retinal persistence," Discovery News quoted Azema and Rivere as writing.

Azema, who spent 20 years researching Stone Age animation techniques, isolated 53 figures in 12 French caves that superimpose two or more images to represent trot or gallop, head tossing and tail shaking.

"Lascaux is the cave with the greatest number of cases of split-action movement by superimposition of successive images. Some 20 animals, principally horses, have the head, legs or tail multiplied," Azema said.

When the paintings are viewed by flickering torchlight, the animated effect "achieves its full impact," Azema said.

"That such animation was intentional is endorsed by the likely use of incised disks as thaumatropes," he said.

Regarded as the direct ancestor of the cinematic camera, the thaumatrope was invented in 1825 by the astronomer John Hershel and later commercialized by the physicist John Ayrton Paris (1785- 1856).

Consisting of a card or disk with different designs on either side, the device demonstrates the persistence of vision: when the card or disk is twirled, the designs appear to blend into one.

Azema's co-author, Florent Rivere discovered that Paleolithic artists used similar optical toys well in advance of their 19th-century descendants.

Rivere examined Magdalenian bone discs - objects found in the Pyrenees, the north of Spain and the Dordogne which measure about 1.50 inches in diameter.

Often pierced in their centre, the discs have been generally interpreted as buttons or pendants.

"Given that some are decorated on both sides with animals shown in different positions, we realized that another type of use, relating to sequential animation, was possible," the researchers said.

They mentioned one of the most convincing cases, a bone disc found in 1868 in the Dordogne. On one side, the disc features a standing doe or a chamois. On the other side, the animal is lying down.

The researchers discovered that if a string was threaded through the central hole and then stretched tight to make the disc rotate about its lateral axis, the result was a superimposition of the two pictures on the retina.

"The animal goes down then gets back up in a fraction of a second and vice versa," they wrote.

They said that in these flickering images lie the origins of cinema.

"Paleolithic thaumatropes can be claimed as the earliest of the attempts to represent movement that culminated in the invention of the cinematic camera," they added.

The study has been published in Antiquity. (ANI)

  • Scenes from the 2013 Paris Air Show

    Scenes from the 2013 Paris Air Show

    Tue 18 Jun, 2013
    Scenes from the 2013 Paris Air Show

    Take a look at the scenes from the 50th International Paris Air Show, 2013. It is considered as the world's largest aviation and space industry show, and takes place at Le Bourget airport June 17-23.

  • Now, a battery-powered flying bicycle

    Now, a battery-powered flying bicycle

    Fri 14 Jun, 2013
    Now, a battery-powered flying bicycle

    Three Czech companies have teamed up to make a prototype of an electric bicycle that successfully took off Wednesday inside an exhibition hall in Prague and landed safely after a five-minute flight. The amazing machine is currently controlled remotely while in development but its designers hope to have it capable of carrying people soon.

  • The Rs 17 crore palace on wheels

    The Rs 17 crore palace on wheels

    Fri 14 Jun, 2013
    The Rs 17 crore palace on wheels

    The world's most expensive mobile home has gone on sale in Dubai for £2 million, approximately INR 17 crores.

    The humongous, 40-foot-long eleMMent Palazzo from Austrian company Marchi Mobile is covered with gold and comes with a ton of luxury features, including a 40-inch flat screen, a pop-up cocktail lounge, a fireplace, a master bedroom, and underfloor heating.

    The moving mansion can even clean itself. "... the vehicle has been a hit among oil-rich Arab Sheikhs - the state-of-the-art homes even wash themselves after a day's driving through the Middle Eastern desert," the Daily Mail reports.

    But the amazing vehicle could also cater to any multi-millionaire or global superstar on the road. It's also available in white (shown here).

  • Narendra Modi

    Narendra Modi

    Yahoo! India News - Fri 23 Nov, 2012
    Narendra Modi

    From shaking up the very foundations of the Indian government to stirring up unseemly controversies, from showing incredible courage in the face of extreme adversities to losing a reputation built over years of hard work in just a blink of an eye, from setting the electoral hustings afire with golden speeches to getting into trouble for not speaking at all, there were many 'newsmakers' in 2012 who caught the common man's imagination. Some made it for stellar reasons, others for all there is wrong with the society. Here are 12 'newsmakers' that deserve a mention.

  • Arvind Kejriwal

    Yahoo! India News - Fri 23 Nov, 2012

    From shaking up the very foundations of the Indian government to stirring up unseemly controversies, from showing incredible courage in the face of extreme adversities to losing a reputation built over years of hard work in just a blink of an eye, from setting the electoral hustings afire with golden speeches to getting into trouble for not speaking at all, there were many 'newsmakers' in 2012 who caught the common man's imagination. Some made it for stellar reasons, others for all there is wrong with the society. Here are 12 'newsmakers' that deserve a mention.

  • Malala Yousafzai

    Malala Yousafzai

    Yahoo! India News - Fri 23 Nov, 2012
    Malala Yousafzai

    From shaking up the very foundations of the Indian government to stirring up unseemly controversies, from showing incredible courage in the face of extreme adversities to losing a reputation built over years of hard work in just a blink of an eye, from setting the electoral hustings afire with golden speeches to getting into trouble for not speaking at all, there were many 'newsmakers' in 2012 who caught the common man's imagination. Some made it for stellar reasons, others for all there is wrong with the society. Here are 12 'newsmakers' that deserve a mention.

  • How to improve battery life on Android phones

    Just follow these simple steps to find out how you can limit background application activity and improve battery life as well. *Please note that this only works with Android version 4.0 and later. …

  • Notes on a Himalayan flood

    A distant mountain lover struggles to piece together what’s going on exactly in Uttarakhand. …

  • Jinxed houses

    Shamnath Marg was a high- profile address till its last occupant, former industries minister Deep Chand Bandhu, died of illness in the bungalow. Since then, politicians have shunned the address, branding it a "jinxed abode". …

  • Nitish thanks Manmohan Singh for calling him a "secular leader"

    Patna, June 18 (ANI): Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has thanked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for calling him a "secular leader" and said the praise has given him "peace of mind." …

  • Sushant, Parineeti in 'Shuddh Desi Romance'

    New Delhi, June 17 (IANS) Yash Raj Films (YRF) has settled for a quirky title for its project starring actors Sushant Singh Rajput and Parineeti Chopra. The movie, directed by Maneesh Sharma, is titled "Shuddh Desi Romance". …

  • Advani aide calls Modi autocrat, Rajnath foxy

    India, June 19 -- Veteran BJP leader LK Advani may have come to terms with Gujarat CM Narendra Modi overtaking him as the face of the party, but close aide Sudheendra Kulkarni still hasn't.In a strongly-worded letter posted on rediff.com, he condemns Modi and calls party president Rajnath Singh 'foxy'.Kulkarni - who headed Advani's campaign in the 2009 Lok Sabha polls and became part of the BJP's vision document team as late as 2012 writes: "An autocrat is sought to be enthroned, and a perfect …

  • Modi meets Advani to get backing for new role

    New Delhi, June 18 (IANS) Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday met L.K. Advani to get the BJP patriarch's backing for his new role as head of the BJP's campaign committee, an elevation that has split the NDA. …

Related Videos

Yahoo! Cricket

Loading...