| Literature DB >> 25615428 |
Marcos García-Diez1, Daniel Garrido2, Dirk Hoffmann3, Paul Pettitt4, Alistair Pike5, Joao Zilhão6.
Abstract
The hand stencils of European Paleolithic art tend to be considered of pre-Magdalenian age and scholars have generally assigned them to the Gravettian period. At El Castillo Cave, application of U-series dating to calcite accretions has established a minimum age of 37,290 years for underlying red hand stencils, implying execution in the earlier part of the Aurignacian if not beforehand. Together with the series of red disks, one of which has a minimum age of 40,800 years, these motifs lie at the base of the El Castillo parietal stratigraphy. The similarity in technique and colour support the notion that both kinds of artistic manifestations are synchronic and define an initial, non-figurative phase of European cave art. However, available data indicate that hand stencils continued to be painted subsequently. Currently, the youngest, reliably dated examples fall in the Late Gravettian, approximately 27,000 years ago.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25615428 DOI: 10.4436/JASS.93004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anthropol Sci ISSN: 1827-4765