ARCHAEOLOGY
A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
 
Email this article
newsbriefs
Pakistani Petroglyphs Volume 50 Number 1, January/February 1997
by Ulrich Schendzielorz

[image] Threatened Karakoram rock carving (Ulrich Schendzielorz/Peter Arnold Inc.)
[LARGER IMAGE, 38K]

Aproposed dam on the Indus River threatens more than 30,000 rock carvings near the village of Chilas in the Karakoram mountain range of northern Pakistan. The dam would provide electricity to the region but would destroy petroglyphs that a UNESCO team says are of great historical and artistic value. So far researchers have documented images of animals, hunting scenes, life-size human figures, Buddhist shrines, sun-wheels, battle-axes, heraldic symbols of tribes and clans, and Indian, Persian, Chinese, and Hebrew inscriptions. Harald Hauptmann, director of the German Archaeological Institute in Istanbul and head of the team responsible for the UNESCO-supported study, dated the shrine carvings stylistically to between the first century B.C. and the eighth century A.D. Uncertain whether the dam will stimulate economic growth, the World Bank has been reluctant to invest in it; Hauptmann says the petroglyphs are doomed if the project proceeds.

-----
© 1997 by the Archaeological Institute of America
www.archaeology.org/9701/newsbriefs/pakistan.html

Share this page:



del.icio.us  StumbleUpon

Share

E-Update

Stay up-to-date on news and
new features on our website.
Click here to sign up.

Buy back issues:

ARCHAEOLOGY back issues
See what's available!

current issue

July/August 2008

Current Issue


Subscribe to Archaeology Magazine

SPECIAL ONLINE OFFER
(new subscribers only)


online content

Exclusive Features
Martyrs or Imperial Guard?, Case of the Disarticulated Donkey, Augustan Games of Naples

Latest News
Daily archaeological headlines

Interactive Digs
Johnson's Island, Ohio; Sagalassos, Turkey; Hierakonpolis, Egypt

Reviews & Shows
Dame Kathleen Kenyon, From the Land of the Labyrinth, Maps

Interviews
Heather Pringle, Shelby Brown, Silvana Rizzo, David Gill

Privacy Policy - Contact Us - Advertise
© 2008 Archaeological Institute of America
Website by Castle Builder Design
Hosting donated by Hurricane Electric
he.net