'The images could be much older': Analysis of rocks shows Neanderthals made art at least 64,000 years ago

Art has sometimes thought to be exclusive to modern humans.

A photograph of Neanderthal handprints on a cave wall
Neanderthal handprints in a replica of Maltravieso Cave, Spain
(Image credit: WH Pics via Shutterstock)

The ability to make art has often been considered a hallmark of our species. Over a century ago, prehistorians even had trouble believing that modern humans from the Upper Paleolithic (between 45,000 and 12,000 years ago) were capable of artistic flair.

Discoveries of uncontrovertibly old artworks from the caves and rockshelters of Europe soon dispelled their doubts. But what of the Neanderthals; an ancient, large-brained sister group to our own species? We now know that they were capable of making art too.

Paul Pettitt
Professor in the Department of Archaeology, Durham University

Paul Pettitt is a professor of Archaeology at Durham University who specializes in the European Middle and Upper Paleolithic, focusing on Neanderthal behavior, Paleolithic art, and early human mortuary activity. He co-discovered Britain’s only examples of Paleolithic cave art at Creswell Crags and has conducted excavations there and at Kent’s Cavern. His research combines archaeology, chronometry, and psychology to explore the evolution of symbolic and ritual behavior in early humans.

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