IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON OLDEST CAVE PAINTING
- May 18, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON OLDEST CAVE PAINTING
Subject : Culture
Context : Recently, the researchers in the online peer-reviewed open access journal ‘Scientific Reports’ have reported that world’s oldest cave art are weathering at an alarming rate due to climate change.
Concept :
- The researchers studied flakes of rock that have begun to detach from cave surfaces to find that salts in three of the samples comprise calcium sulphate and sodium chloride.
- The artwork made with pigments was decaying due to a process known as haloclasty.
- It is triggered by the growth of salt crystals due to repeated changes in temperature and humidity, caused by alternating wet and dry weather in the region.
- Indonesia has also experienced several natural disasters in recent years, which have quickened the process of deterioration.
- The extreme patterns of increased seasonal moisture from monsoonal rains and worsening droughts are accelerating rock art deterioration.
World’s Oldest Cave Art
- It is a Pleistocene-era rock paintings dating back to 45,000-20,000 years ago.
- It is located in cave sites in southern Sulawesi, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
- The limestone cave walls are adorned with hand stencils of red and mulberry tint, in addition to paintings of native mammals and human-animal hybrids.
Significance of the cave paintings
- A team of Australian and Indonesian archaeological scientists, conservation specialists, and heritage managers examined 11 caves and rock-shelters in the Maros-Pangkep region in Sulawesi.
- The artwork in the area includes what is believed to be the world’s oldest hand stencil created by pressing the hand on a cave wall, and spraying wet red-mulberry pigments over it.
- A nearby cave features the world’s oldest depiction of an animal, a warty pig painted on the wall 45,500 years ago.
- The cave art of Sulawesi is much older than the prehistoric cave art of Europe.