13,000-year-old drawing found near Vero Beach may be the most ‘rare work of art in the Americas’
June 9th, 2009 by TCPalm.comVERO BEACH — Local amateur fossil collector James Kennedy appears to have made an unprecedented archaeological discovery that might help confirm a human presence here up to 13,000 years ago.

A prehistoric bone fragment found near Vero Beach contains a crude engraving of a mammoth or mastodon on it.
A 15-inch-long prehistoric bone fragment found near Vero Beach contains a crude engraving of a mammoth or mastodon on it, said Dr. Barbara Purdy, emeritus professor of anthropology at the University of Florida.
“It is humbling to realize that we are seeing what the hunter saw more than 13,000 years ago,” Purdy said.
Tests so far have shown it to be genuine.
If so, it appears to be “the oldest, most spectacular and rare work of art in the Americas,” she wrote in a report to other scientists.
The only comparable images are found in European cave paintings, she said in an interview Friday. The bone contains “the unmistakable incising of an ancient proboscidean (elephant),” she said.
Kennedy found the brown and tan bone two years ago and put it under his sink. About two months ago, he took it out for cleaning and spotted unusual lines. He had been considering selling it at a flea market.
Instead, he showed it to a fellow collector, William Roddenberry of Vero Beach, who was amazed. They took it to the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville for examination.
When Kennedy learned it was so historically valuable, he said, “It blew me away. I was absolutely baffled.”
The etched bone is being kept in a vault. The site where it was found isn’t being disclosed.
“There could be so much more out there” from early people in Florida, he said.
The incised bone was picked up near where other collectors in 1915 apparently found ancient human bones near the bones of extinct animals — a find that launched a national scientific debate that hasn’t been settled. That site is near the Indian River County Administration Building.
This month, a Florida State University archaeologist is leading a team that is taking soil samples from the site at the administration building. That is in preparation for a scientific excavation there next year to help try to settle whether or not humans co-existed here with mammoths and other extinct species.
The bones are from a drainage canal dug early last century through an ancient stream bed that once drained into the Indian River Lagoon. Through the decades, dozens of bones of long-extinct animals have been found there.
“The incising would have to be at least 13,000 years old because that is when the animals became extinct and more recent people would not have seen an elephant to etch,” Purdy wrote in her report about the find. The etching is on bone from either a mammoth, mastodon or giant sloth.
Scientific experts she sent the report to all “expressed great excitement about the discovery of the unique specimen, but all of them, naturally, cautioned that its authenticity should be documented.’’
So she had University of Florida scientists run tests that showed that the three-inch-long image wasn’t recently made.
Those tests and some subjective factors “cause me to conclude that this object is not a fake,” Purdy said.
“The incising is real,” she said.
Next week university researchers are expected to finish a test that will show whether the artifact is from Indian River County. They’re comparing soils from the bone and the discovery site.
Archaeologists across the nation are excited by the discovery.
“There is nothing else like it,” a piece of art dating to around the end of the last Ice Age in the New World, said Steven Holen, curator of paleontology at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. “It is one of the most spectacular finds in American archaeology in recent history.”
By Elliott Jones
Tags: art, beach, canal, Florida, history, national, painting, saw, science

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June 9th, 2009 at 1:50 pm
I found what appears to be a fossilized egg. It has what appear to be tiny veins all around it. It is the size of a big jawbreaker and is very hard. any ideas?
June 9th, 2009 at 4:20 pm
It is a fossilized Membrana Testacea from a Titanosaurid. Look it up.
June 11th, 2009 at 8:01 am
Man has been depicting animals in artwork for tens of thousands of years, so why not in the Americas?I noticed several national publications have picked this story up and their headlines have included FRAUD OR HOAX,primarily, in my opinion because an amateur or “avocational archeologist” made the find.Kudos to Mr Kennedy for the diligence and desire he has to look for and find such a treasure.Im sure ,before this is over the establishment will try to take it from him on some pretext or another,ignoring the countless hours he has spent pursuing his personal quest into mans history in the Americas.
June 15th, 2009 at 2:54 pm
Actually there are at least ten other examples of archaeological evidence of man and mammoth.
see:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/8960726/Seeing-the-Elephant-Mastadon-Mammoth1