Updated On: 09 April, 2022 10:36 AM IST | Mumbai | Shriram Iyengar
The addition of ancient carvings to UNESCO’s tentative list of World Heritage Sites underlines the importance, and fascinating history of the region

Asia’s largest geoglyph at Kasheli
To describe our ancestors as ancient or primitive is often a misnomer. The word conveys the image of man as barbaric, rough and uncouth to the ways of the world. It is erroneous. As the findings of the stunning petroglyphs in Konkan prove — before there was language, there was art.
Dating back to 5,000 years to almost 20,000 years, the petroglyphs from the Konkan region of Maharashtra and Goa are a stunning evidence of the ability, observation and life of our ancestors. Carved on the laterite Konkan plateau, these works are an evidence of life during that period. Sudhir Risbud of the Nisargyatri Sanstha, and a dedicated naturalist, says, “From the perspective of the history of human evolution, petroglyphs are the first example of a human being’s need for expression.”