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Val Camonica

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Rock Drawings in Valcamonica*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

State Party  Italy
Type Cultural
Criteria iii, vi
Reference 94
Region Europe and North America
Inscription History
Inscription 1979  (3rd Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
Region as classified by UNESCO.

Val Camonica is a valley in the lower Alpine regions of Lombardy, Italy. It is the upper valley of the river Oglio, upstream from Lake Iseo. Most of Val Camonica lies in the northern part of the province of Brescia.

It is home to the greatest complex of rock drawings in sub-Alpine Italy, with approximately 350,000 petroglyphs drawn by members of the Camunni tribe on hundreds of exposed rocks dating from about 8000 BC; cosmological, figurative, and cartographic motifs are featured, in some locations forming monumental hunting and ritual `scenes´. It includes also scenes of zoophilia.

The best-known drawings were first discovered in 1909 by Walter Laeng, a Brescian geographer. He announced his finding of two carvings on two boulders on the Pian del Greppe near Cemmo.

Since the 1950s, the imagery from thousands of rock surfaces has been `catalogued´, in a vast, on-going project of transcription and classification. In 1979, UNESCO included these samples to its World-wide Patrimony listing of rock art.

Contents

[edit] Turism

The Val Camonica has different areas of tourism interest:


[edit] Photo gallery

[edit] External link

[edit] See also


Coordinates: 45°56′N, 10°16′E

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