A close-up of carved mammoth ivory with ancient markings for an article about oldest star chart

Humans carve the oldest known star chart into mammoth ivory

A sliver of mammoth ivory no bigger than a matchbook, pulled from a collapsed German cave in 1979 C.E., sat in an archaeological catalogue for more than two decades before anyone recognized what was carved on its face: the night sky. When researcher Michael Rappenglueck ran computer simulations to reconstruct the Ice Age heavens as they appeared from the cave mouth, the proportions matched a constellation with striking precision. Guinness World Records now lists this object — the Ach Valley tusk — as the oldest known star chart in human history, dating to roughly 35,000 B.C.E.

What the evidence shows

  • Oldest star chart: The ivory tablet from Geißenklösterle cave in Germany’s Ach Valley measures just 38 by 14 by 4 millimeters and is estimated to be between 32,500 and 38,000 years old — placing it around 35,000 B.C.E.
  • Orion correspondence: The carved figure’s narrow waist matches Orion’s three-star belt; its slightly shorter left leg mirrors the constellation’s asymmetry; the position of the star phi2 Ori aligns with the figure’s crown as it would have appeared from the cave entrance at that time.
  • Notch calendar: The reverse side carries 86 small notches — a number Rappenglueck calculates corresponds both to the days Betelgeuse disappears below the horizon from that location and, when subtracted from a full year, to the average length of a human pregnancy.

A carving that waited 32,000 years to be understood

The cave at Geißenklösterle sits in the Swabian Alps of southern Germany, carved into a limestone cliff above the Ach River. Its occupants belonged to the Aurignacian culture — early modern humans who had spread into Europe from western Asia roughly 40,000 years ago and left behind one of the richest material records of the entire Upper Paleolithic period.

Excavations at Geißenklösterle have yielded carved ivory flutes, animal figurines, beads, and weapons. The tusk fragment was one of thousands of objects recovered during fieldwork led by archaeologist Nicholas Conard in the late 1970s and 1980s. It was catalogued, studied for its carved human figure, and largely set aside.

It wasn’t until Rappenglueck, a researcher at LMU Munich, began digitally modeling the Aurignacian sky that the object’s second identity emerged. The carved figure — long interpreted as a man — matched Orion not just in rough shape but in specific astronomical detail. The proportions aligned with the constellation as it would have appeared from the cave’s mouth at that latitude and at that period in Earth’s axial precession cycle, when Orion occupied a somewhat different position in the sky than it does today.

What the oldest star chart reveals about Ice Age minds

The find reshapes what we know about cognitive life during the Upper Paleolithic. To carve a star chart into ivory, the maker needed to observe the sky systematically over time, abstract a three-dimensional field of stars into a two-dimensional surface, and encode that information in a portable object. That is not incidental. That is a technology.

The Aurignacian peoples who made this object were not the only ones watching the sky. Around the same period, painters at Lascaux cave in France may have recorded the Pleiades star cluster in animal paintings — a suggestion also advanced by Rappenglueck. A panel in La Tête du Lion cave, created more than 21,000 years ago, may depict Taurus alongside a Pleiades marker. The carved Northern Crown constellation appears at El Castillo cave in northern Spain from roughly the same era. The Geißenklösterle ivory may be the oldest surviving example, but it was almost certainly not a solitary act of sky-watching.

The 86 notches on the reverse side add another layer. If Rappenglueck’s reading is correct, the same object encoded both astronomical observation and biological knowledge — a calendar linking the movement of a star to the cycle of human reproduction. Whether the maker was tracking a pregnancy, a hunting season tied to Betelgeuse’s visibility, or both, the notches suggest a mind comfortable holding multiple time systems at once.

It is also worth considering what this object was for. Ivory was not an easy material to carve, and the piece is small enough to be worn or carried. It may have served as a personal instrument — a portable reference for navigating by stars, timing a birth, or marking a season. The possibility that it was made by or for a woman, given the dual astronomical-pregnancy encoding Rappenglueck identifies, has been raised by researchers and remains open.

Lasting impact

The oldest star chart places systematic sky observation at the very beginning of the European Upper Paleolithic — and possibly earlier, given that the Aurignacian people arrived in Europe already culturally sophisticated. Every star catalogue, navigation table, astrolabe, and observatory that followed descended from exactly this kind of attentive, patient watching and recording.

The Nebra sky disk, created around 1,600 B.C.E. in central Europe, would encode the Pleiades and lunar phases on bronze some 33,000 years after this ivory was carved. Ancient Egyptian astronomers produced the oldest accurately dated star chart around 1,534 B.C.E. Babylonian sky catalogues, Chinese star maps, the Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi’s illustrated Book of Fixed Stars in 964 C.E., the Dunhuang Star Chart found in a Silk Road cave — all of these traditions trace a continuous human practice of organizing the night sky that this small ivory object, sitting in a German cave, was already doing 35,000 years ago.

The immediate practical consequence was likely navigation and seasonal timing. But the deeper consequence was a habit of mind: the sky as a system, legible and recordable. That habit underlies every science that followed.

Blindspots and limits

The Orion interpretation is not universally accepted. The carved figure could represent a human or spirit form with no astronomical intent, and the notch count’s alignment with both Betelgeuse’s disappearance cycle and human pregnancy length may be coincidental — two numbers happening to meet near 86. The piece is also fragmentary, and whether it was part of a larger astronomical tradition or a singular individual act is impossible to determine from a single object. What can be said with confidence is that early modern humans in Ice Age Europe were making intricate, information-dense objects and watching the sky — the exact relationship between those two facts remains, after decades of study, a genuinely open question.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia: Star chart

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
  • 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
  • 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
  • ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.

More Good News

  • Medical researcher in a lab examining vials related to asthma and COPD treatment and mRNA vaccine development

    Doctors hail first breakthrough in asthma and COPD treatment in 50 years

    Benralizumab, a single injection given during an asthma or COPD attack, cut treatment failures fourfold over 90 days compared to the steroid pills doctors have relied on since the 1970s. In a trial of 158 patients arriving at UK emergency departments, the shot eased coughing, wheezing, and breathlessness more effectively than steroids — and could eventually be given at home or in a GP’s office. Because it targets the specific inflammation behind roughly half of asthma attacks, it could spare millions of people from the diabetes and bone-loss risks that come with repeated steroid use. After a 50-year wait for…


  • A nurse in a rural Mexican clinic checks a patient's blood pressure, for an article about Mexico universal healthcare

    Mexico launches universal healthcare for all 133 million citizens

    Mexico universal healthcare is now officially a reality, with the country launching a system designed to cover all 133 million citizens through the restructured IMSS-Bienestar network. Before this reform, an estimated 50 million Mexicans had no formal health insurance, with rural and Indigenous communities bearing the heaviest burden of untreated illness and medical debt. The new system severs the long-standing tie between employment and healthcare access, providing free consultations, medicines, and hospital services regardless of income. If implemented effectively, Mexico’s move could serve as a powerful model for other middle-income nations still navigating fragmented, inequitable health systems.


  • Fishing boats on a West African coastline at sunrise for an article about Ghana marine protected area

    Ghana declares its first marine protected area to rescue depleted fish stocks

    Ghana’s marine protected area — the country’s first ever — marks a historic turning point for a nation gripped by a quiet fisheries crisis. Established near Cape Three Points in the Western Region, the protected zone restricts or bans fishing activity to allow severely depleted fish populations to recover. Ghana’s coastal stocks have fallen by an estimated 80 percent from historic levels, threatening food security and the livelihoods of millions of small-scale fishers. The declaration also carries regional significance, potentially inspiring neighboring Gulf of Guinea nations to establish coordinated protections of their own.



Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.