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  1. Proto-writing consists of visible marks communicating limited information. [2] Such systems emerged from earlier traditions of symbol systems in the early Neolithic, as early as the 7th millennium BC in China and southeastern Europe.

  2. La protoescritura se refiere a los primeros sistemas de la escritura que surgieron en Eurasia a principios del III milenio a. C., que fueron un desarrollo basado en tradiciones anteriores de sistemas..... simbólicos que no pueden ser clasificados como escritura propiamente dicha, pero que tienen muchas características que recuerdan a aquella.

  3. The archaic cuneiform script used to write Sumerian is generally considered to be the earliest true writing system, closely followed by the Egyptian hieroglyphs. Both evolved from proto-writing systems between 3400 and 3200 BC, with the earliest coherent texts dating to c. 2600 BC.

  4. Chapter 2 provides a concise history of writing, from ancient times to the present day. The chapter begins with proto-writing and then the first writing systems, which arose independently in different corners of the world. The discussion shows evidence of the earliest roots of writing from the Egyptian and Mesopotamian areas, as well as in ...

  5. 4 de dic. de 2012 · Initial proto-writing systems could represent only a certain repertoire of relevant objects — their users could not write down current events or stories they may have told each other. Gradually, the proto-writing systems evolved into complete writing systems, allowing people to write down whatever they could express in words of ...

  6. We do not want to press the controversial (and in many senses, semantic) question of whether writing was a Palaeolithic invention; perhaps it is best described as a proto-writing system, an intermediary step between a simpler notation/convention and full-blown writing.