This blog has featured posts about Gobekli Tepe in Turkey before. As ancient locations go, this is one of the most fascinating sites in the entire world! While we don't browse the web daily looking for news on all topics that interest us, today's article falls right smack in the 'interesting news' category!
Owen Jarus writes for NBC News:
Much of Gobekli Tepe remains a mystery while we learn more, discover more, excavate more and - hopefully, eventually - will grow to understand more about our very ancient forefathers and their religious practices.
One need only look at the extremely detailed carvings found at Gobekli Tepe to understand the quality of workmanship of the carvers and know that whatever purpose the place served, those who were around when the structures stood felt that it deserved to be decorated, and that those decorations deserved to be done well. If it was that important to people who lived thousands of years ago, then surely it is something we can learn a great deal from today in order to understand not only ancient religious practices but current religious 'truths' as well.
Owen Jarus writes for NBC News:
"Ancient blades made of volcanic rock that were discovered at what may be the world's oldest temple suggest that the site in Turkey was the hub of a pilgrimage that attracted a cosmopolitan group of people some 11,000 years ago.
The researchers matched up about 130 of the blades, which would have been used as tools, with their source volcanoes, finding people would have come from far and wide to congregate at the ancient temple site, Gobekli Tepe, in southern Turkey. The blades are made of obsidian, a volcanic glass rich with silica, which forms when lava cools quickly."Source : 'World's Oldest temple' was a happenin' place, NBC News
Much of Gobekli Tepe remains a mystery while we learn more, discover more, excavate more and - hopefully, eventually - will grow to understand more about our very ancient forefathers and their religious practices.
One need only look at the extremely detailed carvings found at Gobekli Tepe to understand the quality of workmanship of the carvers and know that whatever purpose the place served, those who were around when the structures stood felt that it deserved to be decorated, and that those decorations deserved to be done well. If it was that important to people who lived thousands of years ago, then surely it is something we can learn a great deal from today in order to understand not only ancient religious practices but current religious 'truths' as well.