Sometime around 25,000 B.C.E., a person living in the rolling hills of what is now the Czech Republic carved something onto a mammoth tusk. Whether they knew it or not, they may have been drawing a map — making a picture of the world around them precise enough to navigate by. That single carved object is now one of the oldest candidates for the earliest known map in human history.
What the evidence shows
- Mammoth tusk map: The Pavlov tusk, discovered at a Late Stone Age site in Moravia, dates to roughly 25,000 B.C.E. and features markings that some researchers interpret as a landscape — hills, rivers, and routes etched in ivory.
- Early cartography candidates: No single artifact is universally accepted as the oldest surviving map; scholars cite several contenders, including clay tablets from ancient Babylonia, cave paintings in France and Spain, and stone etchings from multiple continents.
- Independent invention: Maps of local terrain are widely believed to have been invented independently by many different cultures — meaning no single civilization holds exclusive credit for the idea of representing space on a surface.
A carved tusk in the hills of Moravia
The site at Pavlov, in the Moravian region of what is now the Czech Republic, was home to a community of hunter-gatherers during the Upper Paleolithic period. These were not simple wanderers — they built shelters, made fired clay figurines, and crafted tools with considerable skill. The mammoth tusk fragment found there, with its incised lines and markings, fits into a broader picture of a people who thought carefully about the world around them.
Researchers who have studied the tusk argue that the marks correspond to features of the local landscape — valleys, ridgelines, and waterways consistent with the region’s actual geography. If that reading is correct, whoever made it was doing something cognitively remarkable: abstracting physical space into a symbolic representation that someone else could read and use.
That is what maps do. And doing it 25,000 years ago, in bone, by firelight, is an extraordinary thing.
Maps as a universal human impulse
What makes the history of cartography so compelling is how widely and independently it appears to have emerged. Cultures across the globe — in Mesopotamia, China, Polynesia, the Americas, and sub-Saharan Africa — developed ways of representing space and geography long before any contact with one another.
Polynesian navigators, for example, created stick charts from reeds and shells that encoded wave patterns and island positions across the Pacific Ocean. Indigenous peoples of the Americas used sand paintings, birchbark scrolls, and oral geographic traditions with precision that later European explorers often failed to match. The Babylonians produced clay tablet maps using careful surveying techniques as early as 2500 B.C.E. Chinese cartographers developed sophisticated grid-based mapping systems independently of Greek traditions.
The desire to picture the world — to hold space in the mind and share it with others — appears to be something close to universal in human cognition. The Pavlov tusk, if it is indeed a map, suggests that impulse goes back almost as far as we can see.
What maps made possible
The development of cartographic thinking unlocked capabilities that reshaped human civilization. Coordinating hunts across large territories became easier. Trade networks could be planned and extended. Agricultural communities could record land boundaries, water sources, and seasonal movement of resources. Military campaigns could be organized. Empires could be administered.
Eventually, maps enabled the age of oceanic exploration — and with it, the connection of continents that had evolved in near-total isolation from one another for tens of thousands of years. The Babylonian World Map, dated to around 600 B.C.E. and considered the oldest surviving world map, shows a circle of land surrounded by ocean — a model that captures the imaginative ambition of mapmaking even when its geography was incomplete.
From that symbolic clay tablet to the satellite imagery that now covers nearly every square kilometer of Earth’s surface, the underlying human drive has not changed: to know where we are, and to share that knowledge with others.
Lasting impact
It is difficult to overstate how much cartography has shaped history. Maps are not neutral documents — they encode power, priorities, and worldviews. But at their core, they represent one of the most useful cognitive tools humans have ever developed.
The ability to represent space abstractly enabled long-distance trade, coordinated agriculture, urban planning, and eventually global navigation. Modern GPS systems, digital mapping tools, and services like Google Earth are the direct descendants of that impulse to carve a landscape into bone or press one into clay. The chain from the Pavlov tusk to a smartphone navigation app is long — but it is unbroken.
Mapping also carried profound consequences for science. The effort to map the Earth accurately forced civilizations to grapple with its shape, its size, and its position in the cosmos. Eratosthenes of Cyrene, working in Alexandria around 240 B.C.E., calculated the circumference of the Earth using shadow angles and geometry — one of the most remarkable intellectual achievements of the ancient world, made possible by centuries of accumulated geographic thinking.
Blindspots and limits
The interpretation of the Pavlov tusk as a map remains contested. Some researchers see deliberate geographic encoding in its markings; others argue the lines may be decorative, tallying, or symbolic in ways unrelated to spatial navigation. Without written context, certainty is impossible. It is also worth noting that the historical record of cartography is heavily skewed toward civilizations that left durable artifacts — clay, stone, and parchment survive; wooden sticks, sand drawings, and oral geographic traditions largely do not. The maps of many cultures, including those of Indigenous peoples across Africa, the Americas, and the Pacific, are underrepresented in the archaeological record not because those cultures lacked geographic knowledge, but because their tools and methods left fewer physical traces.
Read more
For more on this story, see: History of cartography — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure land rights for 160 million hectares at COP30
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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