51,200-Year-Old Sulawesi Cave Art: Hominin or Human?
Could the Sulawesi cave art, dated to 51,200 years ago, have been created by ancient hominins? #southeastasianarchaeology #Indonesia #Sulawesi #caveart
Uranium-thorium dating is used to determine the date of calcium carbonate materials.
Could the Sulawesi cave art, dated to 51,200 years ago, have been created by ancient hominins? #southeastasianarchaeology #Indonesia #Sulawesi #caveart
Laser imaging dates Sulawesi's cave art to 51,200 years ago, revealing the earliest known narrative and representational art. #southeastasianarchaeology #Indonesia ...
Study in Laos's Tham Doun Mai Cave reveals the 8.2 ka event's impact on Southeast Asia, indicating significant monsoon weakening ...
via Journal of Archaeological Science, Reports, August 2023: A study in the Jinsha River valley, in Yunnan, China, reveals over ...
via Journal of Archaeological Science, Feb 2022: Uranium-series dates from rock art in Yunnan put them to between 9,000 and ...
via Journal of Archaeological Science, Feb 2022: Rock art dates from Yunnan province dating to between 13,000 to 8,300 BP.
via The Straits Times, 25 January 2020: ST carried a feature on the discovery of the 45,000-year-old pig painting in ...
via Science Advances, 13 January 2021: If the headline sounds familiar, it's because the 'oldest' rock art keeps getting found ...
via Nature, 18 December 2019: New paper in Nature by Rizal et al. on Homo erectus in Southeast Asia - ...
via Nature, 11 December 2019: Really exciting news out of Sulawesi, about really old rock art again. Leang Bulu’ Sipong ...
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