AFRICAN NEOLITHIC GRINDING STONE
CENTRAL SAHARA, C. 4TH – 3RD MILLENNIUM B.C.
£1,638
Classical Ancient Art // Form Through Time
Auction: Form Through Time - 21st March 2024 at 2pm
Description
carved volcanic stone, worked into a deep crescent shape over years of use
Dimensions
43.3cm long
Provenance
Provenance:
Private collection, Belgium, formed early 1970s – present
Footnote
Note:
12,000 years ago, global climate shifts redirected Africa's seasonal monsoons northward, bringing rainfall to a vast expanse of the modern Sahara. This transformation led to the formation of lush watersheds spanning from Egypt to Mauritania, attracting diverse animal life and eventually human settlement. The present piece dates to around 6,000 - 5,000 years before the present day, when a people known as the Tenerian herded, hunted and cultivated crops beside great lakes amidst a savannah environment. The rains departed again around 2,500 B.C., and the Green Sahara became a desert once more, with only artefacts such as this grinding stone left to bear witness to the society which had once flourished.