NEW YORK (AP) — Handprints on cave walls in a largely unexplored area of Indonesia may be the oldest rock art studied so far, ...
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.
Asia’s largest noncommercial art event recruited from all corners of the globe, “breaking the stereotypes of what it means to ...
The painted outline of a human hand inside a cave on the Indonesian island of Muna represents what researchers are calling ...
I still think about the feedback I got on one of my first history essays in high school: “good writing, but you rely too much ...
An ancient handprint discovered in an Indonesian cave, dated at least 67,800 years old, may be the world's oldest rock art.
The 67,800-year-old hand stencil looks like a claw—and provides new clues about early human cognition and the migration to ...
The 67,800-year-old reddish-colored stenciled image has become faded over time and is barely visible on a cave wall, but nonetheless embodies an early achievement of human creativity.