Irish Independent

On the pig’s back: 45,000-year-old cave painting could help solve puzzle about the earliest human migrations

- Dean Gray

ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS have discovered the world’s oldest known cave painting: a lifesized picture of a wild pig that dates back at least 45,000 years in Indonesia.

The finding, which has been described in the journal Science Advances, provides the earliest evidence of human settlement of the region.

Co-author Maxime Aubert, of Australia’s Griffith University, said it was found on the island of Sulawesi in 2017 by doctoral student Basran Burhan, as part of surveys the team was carrying out with Indonesian authoritie­s.

The Leang Tedongnge cave is located in a remote valley enclosed by sheer limestone cliffs. It is accessible only during the dry season because of flooding during the wet season.

Measuring 136cm by 54cm, the Sulawesi warty pig was painted using dark red ochre pigment and has a short crest of upright hair, as well as a pair of horn-like facial warts characteri­stic of adult males of the species.

There are two handprints above the pig’s hind legs, and it appears to be facing two other pigs that are only partially preserved, as part of a narrative scene.

“The pig appears to be observing a fight or social interactio­n between two other warty pigs,” said co-author Adam Brumm.

Humans have hunted Sulawesi warty pigs for tens of thousands of years, and they are a key feature of the region’s prehistori­c artwork.

Mr Aubert, a dating specialist, identified a calcite deposit that had formed on top of the painting. He used uranium-series isotope dating to confidentl­y say the deposit was 45,500 years old.

This makes the painting at least that age, “but it could be much older because the dating that we’re using only dates the calcite on top of it,” he explained.

“The people who made it were fully modern, they were just like us, they had all of the capacity and the tools to do any painting that they liked,” he added.

The previously oldest dated rock-art painting was found by the same team in Sulawesi. It depicted a group of parthuman, part-animal figures hunting mammals, and was found to be at least 43,900 years old.

Cave paintings such as these also help fill in gaps about our understand­ing of early human migrations.

It’s known that people reached Australia 65,000 years ago, but they would probably have had to cross the islands of Indonesia, known as “Wallacea”.

This site now represents the oldest evidence of humans in Wallacea, but it’s hoped further research will help show people were in the region much earlier, which would resolve the Australia settlement puzzle.

The team believes the artwork was made by Homo sapiens, as opposed to nowextinct human species like Denisovans, but cannot say this for certain.

 ?? PHOTO: MAXIME AUBERT/AFP ?? Discovery: Researcher­s found two handprints next to the depiction of the pig, which is the world’s oldest known cave painting.
PHOTO: MAXIME AUBERT/AFP Discovery: Researcher­s found two handprints next to the depiction of the pig, which is the world’s oldest known cave painting.

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