Thousands of years before the word “Namibia” existed, a group of Stone Age hunter-gatherers settled into a valley where a hidden spring defied the surrounding desert. They stayed. And they left behind one of the largest collections of rock engravings anywhere on the African continent.
What the evidence shows
- Twyfelfontein rock engravings: At least 2,500 individual carvings have been documented at the site, with modern estimates suggesting more than 5,000 total depictions spread across 212 sandstone slabs.
- Wilton stone age culture: The hunter-gatherers who first inhabited the valley around 6,000 years ago — identified archaeologically as belonging to the Wilton tradition — created most of the iconic engravings and almost certainly all of the paintings.
- Shamanic ritual site: Food remains excavated from the site consist largely of small antelope, rock dassie, and lizards — not the rhinoceroses, elephants, and giraffes depicted on the rocks — strongly suggesting the carvings served spiritual and ritual purposes rather than purely practical ones.
A spring in the desert
The valley at ǀUi-ǁAis — the site’s Damara/Nama name, meaning “jumping waterhole” — sits in the Kunene Region of north-western Namibia, flanked by a sandstone table mountain. Annual rainfall rarely exceeds 150 mm. Temperatures swing dramatically between day and night.
What made the site livable was an underground aquifer resting on an impermeable layer of shale, sustaining a spring in an otherwise punishing environment. For the Wilton culture hunter-gatherers who arrived approximately 4000 B.C.E., that spring was not just a water source. It anchored a community, a cosmology, and a centuries-long creative tradition.
The engravings were made by chiseling through the desert varnish — a hard, dark patina that forms on exposed sandstone — to reveal the lighter rock beneath. The oldest carvings at the site may date back as far as 10,000 B.C.E., suggesting human engagement with this landscape stretches even deeper than the Wilton occupation.
Animals, footprints, and transformation
The subjects carved into the rock at Twyfelfontein are not random. Rhinoceroses, elephants, ostriches, and giraffes appear alongside their own tracks — animal forms paired with the prints that would identify them to a hunter. This pairing of creature and footprint is one of the site’s most distinctive features.
But the engravings go beyond wildlife documentation. One of the most discussed figures is the “Lion Man” — a lion with an unusually long, rectangular, kinked tail ending in a six-toed pugmark. Scholars interpret figures like this as depicting the transformation of a human into an animal, a common element in shamanic traditions found across southern Africa and beyond.
The presence of animals that don’t live in the inland desert — including what early investigators identified as a sea lion and penguins — has long fascinated researchers. It may indicate that Wilton culture people traveled more than 100 km to the Namibian coast. A more recent archaeological survey led by Sven Ouzman reexamines some of these identifications, suggesting several “coastal” animals may be rough depictions of species that did inhabit the area, such as giraffe.
A shared landscape, a layered record
The Wilton culture hunter-gatherers were not the valley’s only inhabitants. Around 2,000 to 2,500 years ago, the Khoikhoi — a pastoral group ethnically related to the San (Bushmen) — moved into ǀUi-ǁAis. They brought their own visual language with them.
The Khoikhoi produced the site’s more geometric imagery, likely representing herder groups. They also carved grinding hollows and game boards into the rock surfaces. Some stones bear marks from being struck as gong stones — rocks that produce unusual resonant tones when hit. The UNESCO World Heritage listing recognizes both traditions as part of what makes Twyfelfontein exceptional.
What sets this site apart from most rock art locations is not just quantity but diversity: rock engravings and rock paintings appearing together is rare in the archaeological record. The paintings, depicting humans in red ochre across six rock shelters, are believed to be entirely the work of the earlier Wilton culture inhabitants.
Lasting impact
Twyfelfontein is now recognized as one of the most significant concentrations of rock petroglyphs in Africa. In 2007 C.E., UNESCO designated it as Namibia’s first World Heritage Site, acknowledging both its archaeological importance and its spiritual meaning to the communities whose ancestors created it.
The site has also contributed to a broader scholarly understanding of how hunter-gatherer societies across southern Africa used art as a window into altered states of consciousness, shamanistic practice, and the relationship between the human and animal worlds. Researchers studying San rock art traditions across the region increasingly understand these images not as simple hunting records but as sophisticated cosmological statements.
The Twyfelfontein-Uibasen Conservancy now manages much of the site in partnership with local tourism operators — a structure that keeps economic benefit within the community.
Blindspots and limits
The archaeological record at Twyfelfontein is richer in images than in excavated material, and much of the site’s interpretation rests on analogy with better-documented San traditions rather than direct evidence from Twyfelfontein itself. The colonial history of the site is also part of its story: the engravings were left unguarded for decades after a 1952 C.E. declaration as a National Monument, and significant damage — including visitor graffiti scratched into sandstone — was done before protections were enforced in 1986 C.E. Some petroglyphs were removed entirely. That loss is permanent.
Early site surveys by Ernst Rudolph Scherz in the 1950s C.E. shaped how researchers still categorize and describe the art, and some of his identifications — including the coastal animals — have since been questioned. The full count of individual depictions remains uncertain, with estimates ranging from 2,500 documented items to more than 5,000 total.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia: Twyfelfontein
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Rhinos return to Uganda’s Kidepo Valley
- Indigenous land rights recognition reaches 160 million hectares
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Namibia
About this article
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