Handprints on the walls of Indonesian caves may be the oldest rock art studied so far, dating back at least 67,800 years.
A red stencil of a hand pressed against the wall of an Indonesian cave is the oldest rock art ever discovered, scientists ...
A hand stencil left on an Indonesian cave wall at least 67,800 years ago may reveal how and when ancient humans reached a lost continent known as Sahul that once linked Australia with southeast Asia.
The 67,800-year-old hand stencil looks like a claw—and provides new clues about early human cognition and the migration to ...
A red stencil of a hand pressed against the wall of an Indonesian cave is the oldest rock art ever discovered, scientists ...
The discovery comes from limestone caves on the island of Sulawesi. Here, faint red hand stencils, created by blowing pigment ...
One of the greatest rock ’n’ roll pilgrimages — and one of the closest to Minnesota — has gotten more enticing.
The painted outline of a human hand inside a cave on the Indonesian island of Muna represents what researchers are calling ...
In the middle of it all stands an industrial relic that’s been given a new reason for life: a cylinder letterpress, complete with a manual crank. Rows of freshly inked pages often float above the ...
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