Experts trying to decipher ancient language
Mar 2nd, 2009
From the International Herald Tribune: Experts trying to decipher ancient language.
When archaeologists on a dig in southern Portugal last year flipped over a heavy chunk of slate and saw writing not used for more than 2,500 years, they were elated.
The enigmatic pattern of inscribed symbols curled symmetrically around the upper part of the rough-edged, yellowish stone tablet and coiled into the middle in a decorative style typical of an extinct Iberian language called Southwest Script.
"We didn’t break into applause, but almost," says Amilcar Guerra, a University of Lisbon lecturer overseeing the excavation. "It’s an extraordinary thing."
For more than two centuries, scientists have tried to decipher Southwest Script, believed to be the peninsula’s oldest written tongue and, along with Etruscan from modern-day Italy, one of Europe’s first. The stone tablet features 86 characters and provides the longest-running text of the Iron Age language ever found. [continue]