The engraved monolith depicting a multi-armed anthropomorphic figure and surrounding symbols, shown in the vintage pH๏τograph, is believed to date from the early 20th-century era of European archaeological exploration. The mountainous backdrop and the attire of the four men suggest that the stone was discovered in Central Europe or the Caucasus—regions known for ritual stone monuments created by prehistoric communities between 3000 and 1500 BCE. Based on stylistic elements such as concentric circles, spirals, and the deity-like figure, scholars tentatively ᴀssign the carving to the Late Bronze Age.
Closer examination indicates that the central figure was carved in a geometric style: a stylized human body with a halo of concentric circles around the head, raised arms holding circular objects, and multiple limb-like extensions radiating outward. The symbols carved around the figure resemble proto-runes or a pre-linguistic script, composed of straight strokes, angular forms, and spiral motifs. Tool-mark analysis from parallel finds of the same era suggests that the carvings were made using polished stone or early bronze chisels, techniques consistent with late Bronze Age craftsmanship.

The meaning of the monolith is thought to be tied to ritual worship of a protective or solar deity, supported by the circular solar motif at the figure’s core and the spiral patterns symbolizing cyclical movement. The surrounding script implies that the stone may have functioned as a ceremonial stele or a sacred boundary marker. Some early 20th-century ethnographers speculated that it could represent the mythic record of a now-lost tribe, though no decipherable reference alphabet has survived to confirm such theories.
The individuals in the pH๏τo appear to be members of an independent research circle or an amateur archaeological society—common in Europe during the early 1900s. These groups typically documented ancient stones through notes and pH๏τography but rarely conducted large-scale excavation due to technical and financial limitations. Fragmentary references in early ethnographic journals suggest that several stones of this type were displaced or lost during later conflicts, complicating modern studies.
Current archaeological consensus, based on the limited surviving documentation, views the monolith as a genuine ritual artifact belonging to a mountain-dwelling ancient culture whose religion blended early astronomy with agrarian rites. Although the surrounding script remains undeciphered, the artifact carries undeniable cultural and archaeological significance, representing one of the many vanished traditions that existed in Europe before the emergence of recorded history.