That's a short sided argument. LNT didn't need to exist thousands of years ago. Disposable <anything> didn't exist back then. Paint stores didn't exist back then. If you wanted to draw on the wall, you had to pick the berries, mash em up, mix em together, add the special mud, and paint it with your fingers. If you wanted a knife you had to nap the rock, carve the bones, and tie them together with the sinew of the animal you hunted for your food. All this done while scratching a living out in the middle of the ass-end of nowhere.
Comparing the efforts of prehistoric man (the culture where this type of art was likely rare) to the vandalism expressed by a ignorant individual who buys paint for $1 or scratches their name into a wall with a $3 knife purchased at some store is laughable. Ancient man's intent is to express their thoughts about daily life. Modern vandalism is to claim personal claim to victory by simply visiting the place. Yeah - you drove 100 miles and hiked 2, what a special accomplishment

.
I find cabins to be interesting historic artifact, the older they are. Cabins that date back more than 100 years are recognized as historic by the park service - you know that their lives were damn hard back then when they were originally built. A modern house that isn't even built by the owners - not so special. A rough hut built by a man scratching out a living off the land in Alaska built 3 years ago - I have respect for that.
It's the effort that goes into things that typically makes them special. Also, the rarity of the item. Not necessarily how old it is. There's lots of old stuff around - someone's antiques are someone else's junk. Age alone doesn't make anything significant.
chumley wrote:I answered no as well. But with similar answers that others have replied.
What's sort of funny is that one of the "treasures" that many seek to find on their explorations are the exact opposite of LNT, in fact some might call it graffiti. Others call them petroglyphs.
How old do drawings on a beautiful canyon wall need to be before they're a worthy destination, and not a disgusting scar?