ArchaeoBlog

June 19, 2012

Speaking of which. . . . .

Filed under: Dating — acagle @ 6:45 pm

Spanish Cave Paintings’ Age Questioned by Archaeologist

Cave paintings in Spain need to be analyzed further before the works can be confirmed as the oldest known examples in the world, an archaeologist said, casting doubt over a paper published in the journal Science.

A team led by Alistair Pike of the University of Bristol in England said in the paper that paintings at El Castillo cave date back at least 40,800 years. That would make them about 4,000 years older than those at the Chauvet cave in France, meaning the Spanish works could be the only cave art ever found to have been painted by Neanderthals, according to Pike.

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