WORLD NEWS
A 12,000-year-old solar calendar may have been found at Göbekli Tepe, Turkey.
By Aniket Chakraborty
May 22, 2025
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Image Credit | @BrightInsight6 | X
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Researchers believe a carved pillar tracks all 365 days of the solar year.
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Image Credit | @BrightInsight6 | X
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A worn “V” mark near a bird’s neck hints at a summer solstice symbol.
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Image Credit | @BrightInsight6 | X
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These carvings suggest deep astronomical knowledge—long before writing existed.
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The site also tracks lunar cycles and meteor streams, including the Taurids.
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A comet strike in 10,850 BCE may have inspired sky-watching and early religion.
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Pillar 43 could even depict the meteor that triggered a mini ice age.
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The calendar predates
Hipparchus
and ancient Greek astronomy by thousands of years.
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Göbekli Tepe may link cosmic tracking to agriculture, myth, and social order.
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This could be humanity’s first attempt to make sense of time and the stars.
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