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Ratnagiri’s Pre-Historic Rock Art

Context:

Experts and conservationists have raised concerns over the proposed location for a mega oil refinery in Barsu village of Maharashtra’s Ratnagiri district. They claim that the refinery might damage prehistoric geoglyphs found in the area.

Relevance:

GS I: History

Dimensions of the Article:

  1. About the Barsu-Solgaon site:
  2. What are geoglyphs?
  3. Significance of Ratnagiri’s prehistoric rock art
  4. Why have experts raised red flags over the refinery project site at Barsu- Solgaon?

About the Barsu-Solgaon site:

  • The sites are protected by the state archaeology department and the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).
  • Recently, these sites in the Konkan region were added to a tentative list of UNESCO’s world heritage sites.
  • While the UNESCO listing dates these sites to be over 12,000 years old, some experts have claimed that these sites might go as far back as 20,000 years, and that this can be ascertained through carbon and geological dating.
  • The Barsu-Solgaon site was proposed after the original plan to construct a refinery in Nanar village of the district was dropped in 2019.

What are geoglyphs?

  • Geoglyphs are a form of prehistoric rock art, created on the surface of laterite plateaus (Sada in Marathi).
  • They are made by removing a part of the rock surface through an incision, picking, carving or abrading.
  • They can be in the form of rock paintings, etchings, cup marks and ring marks.
  • The UNESCO listing mentions “Konkan geoglyphs.” However, elsewhere, the term petroglyph (literally, “rock symbol/character”) is also used.
  • As per the UNESCO listing, petroglyphs and geoglyphs share similarities as both require the skills of removing parts or engraving a symbol on the rock surface.

Significance of Ratnagiri’s prehistoric rock art

  • Clusters of geoglyphs are spread across the Konkan coastline in Maharashtra and Goa, spanning around 900 km.
  • Porous laterite rock, which lends itself to such carving, is found on a large scale across the entire region.
  • Ratnagiri district has more than 1,500 pieces of such art, also called “Katal shilpa,” spread across 70 sites.
  • UNESCO’s tentative world heritage list mentions seven sites with petroglyphs in Ratnagiri district — Ukshi, Jambharun, Kasheli, Rundhe Tali, Devihsol, Barsu and Devache Gothane, one in Sindhudurg district –Kudopi village, and nine sites at Phansamal in Goa.
  • According to UNESCO, “rock art in India is one of oldest material evidence of the country’s early human creativity.”
  • Ratnagiri’s rock art is evidence of the continued existence of human settlements from the Mesolithic (middle stone age) to the early historic era.
  • The geoglyphs also show the existence of certain types of fauna that are no longer present in the region today.
  • Ratnagiri’s prehistoric sites are among three Indian attractions that may soon become World Heritage Sites.
    • The other two include Jingkieng Jri, the living root bridge in Meghalaya, and Sri Veerabhadra Temple in Andhra Pradesh’s Lepakshi.

Why have experts raised red flags over the refinery project site at Barsu- Solgaon?

  • The committee of experts appointed by the Union Ministry of Science and Technology visited Ratnagiri last month to assess the funds required for the conservation of geoglyphs.
  • Senior archaeologist said that more than 250 geoglyphs have been identified in the area where the petrochemical refinery will be built.
    • He said that if the project starts at the presently proposed site in Barsu, the rock carvings will get destroyed due to construction and chemical reaction at the site.

-Source:  Indian Express


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