Climate change is destroying the world’s oldest cave art

Scientists have warned that environmental degradation is killing one of the oldest and most precious pieces of the world’s human heritage.

Daily Current Affairs Quiz 2021

Researchers writing in the online peer-reviewed open access journal ‘Scientific Reports’, published by Nature Research, have reported that Pleistocene-era rock paintings dating back to 45,000-20,000 years ago in cave sites in southern Sulawesi, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, are weathering at an alarming rate.

A team of Australian and Indonesian archaeological scientists, conservation specialists, and heritage managers examined 11 caves and rock-shelters in the Maros-Pangkep region in Sulawesi.

The artwork in the area includes what is believed to be the world’s oldest hand stencil (almost 40,000 years ago), created by pressing the hand on a cave wall, and spraying wet red-mulberry pigments over it.

A nearby cave features the world’s oldest depiction of an animal, a warty pig painted on the wall 45,500 years ago.

The cave art of Sulawesi is much older than the prehistoric cave art of Europe.

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