The 35,000 Year-Old Green Goddess

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As we move closer to the summer solstice and the longest day of the year, I'm feeling the pull of my pagan roots. There is dirt under my fingernails from gardening and clay from a goddess sculpture I made recently. I used to do some potting and sculpture but it rarely inspires me anymore. I like the primordial silkiness of hands on wet clay, but it dries out the skin with a vengeance. I had a lump of clay waiting for the Muse to strike when I read about the discovery of the oldest goddess figurine in Germany.  Think about it: long before Jesus, Buddha, Mohammad, or the pantheon of Hindu, Greek or Romans deities, the Goddess was alive and well. It's mind boggling amount of time 35,000 years and it didn't take long for me to form my homage to Her.

For Astrology buffs, the summer Solstice falls at 1:45 EDT this Sunday, June 21,2009. To learn more about the Solstice and how it affects you, go to a very cool site called realastrolgers.com http://www.realstrologers.com/

This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times.

A photograph of the carved ivory figurine in Tübingen, southern Germany, yesterday. The piece is believed to be the world's oldest reproduction of a human. Photograph: Daniel Maurer/APA photograph of the carved ivory figurine in Tübingen, southern Germany, yesterday. The piece is believed to be the world's oldest reproduction of a human. Photograph: Daniel Maurer/AP

DEREK SCALLY in Berlin

ANTHROPOLOGISTS IN Germany have discovered 35,000 year-old proof of man’s one-track mind.Massive breasts, broad hips, exaggerated sexual organs and no head: that is how our Ice Age fathers viewed their women – judging by the ivory figurine uncovered in southwest Germany that is being hailed as an anthropological sensation.Just 6cm long and dubbed “Venus” after the goddess of love and beauty, the statue is the oldest of its kind ever found and may force a drastic rewriting of the development of art among early humans.
“The thing is loaded with sexual energy,” said Nicholas Conard, a US-born anthropologist whose team found the figurine last September, in Nature magazine.
“I showed the piece to a male colleague and he said, ‘Well well, I see that not much has changed in the last 40,000 years’.”Experts believe the yellowed statue, carved from a woolly mammoth, was worn around the neck and may have served as a symbolic representation of fertility.The statue was discovered in six pieces in the “Hohe Fels” cave south of the Swabian town of Ulm in southwestern Germany.Radiocarbon dating placed the layer of debris in which it was found, three metres beneath the cave floor, at 35,000 to 40,000 years old. “I was speechless, the whole team was,” said Dr Conard. Until now, the oldest such statues found were estimated to be 25,000 to 30,000 years old.The Swabian cave Venus called home for 4,000 centuries has been a rich hunting ground for Conard and his team: four years ago a dig uncovered a stone penis estimated to be about 28,000 years old.Unlike Venus, however, the stone member was a generous 20cm long.“If there’s one conclusion you want to draw from this, it’s that an obsession with sex goes back at least 35,000 years,” said Cambridge anthropologist Prof Paul Mellars, uninvolved in the dig, to German radio.“But if humans hadn’t been largely obsessed with sex they wouldn’t have survived for the first two million years. None of this is at all surprising.”Anyone anxious to sneak a peek at the world’s oldest nude woman should get to Stuttgart in September for the exhibition Ice Age: Art and Culture . Ask for Venus.
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  • 6/19/2009 1:52 PM Kathryn wrote:
    Wow, what remarkable statues, yes, one track mind, but so earthy, the all fertile mother, earth, woman, one and the same.
    Thanks for reminding me of the solstice.I had forgotten what day it falls on this year.
    Now back to reading my stack of romance novels, then to analyze them and write some of my own this summer. Well, one, anyway.
    And back to bed. Sooo tired.
    Reply to this
  • 6/19/2009 2:43 PM Diana wrote:
    Nice to see both the 35,000 year old goddess and your new one. Happy Solstice!
    Reply to this

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