In January 2026, a research team announced that a hand stencil pressed into the cave wall at Liang Metanduno on Muna Island, Sulawesi, had been dated to at least 67,800 years ago. Laser-ablation U-series dating placed it at 71,600 years old, plus or minus 3,800 years. That’s the oldest human-made mark currently known to science.
Think about what that image actually is. Someone stood in a cave, pressed their hand flat against the stone, and blew pigment around their fingers. They weren’t labeling territory or recording inventory. They were fixing a living shape – their own body, extending into the world – onto something that would outlast them by tens of thousands of years.
That question – why do that – is worth sitting with. The answer isn’t simply that they could. Humans have been anatomically capable of this kind of act for much longer than any art we’ve found. The better explanation is that the drive to look at the living world and translate it into something permanent is not a cultural behavior that emerged at some convenient point in history. It’s older than culture as we’ve defined it. It may be closer to what we fundamentally are.
The Oldest Images Known to Humanity
The Indonesian discoveries of the past decade have completely redrawn the map of human art history. Before 2014, the dominant view in archaeology placed the origins of figurative art in Europe – the caves of southern France and northern Spain, dated to around 30,000 to 40,000 years ago. That timeline has been dismantled.
In July 2024, a team led by Adhi Oktaviana published findings in the journal Nature confirming that a cave painting at Leang Karampuang in Sulawesi is at least 51,200 years old. The painting shows a wild pig and three human-like figures interacting. It’s not just the oldest figurative art known – it’s the earliest surviving evidence of narrative composition in human history. Oktaviana put it plainly: “Humans have probably been telling stories for much longer than 51,200 years, but as words do not fossilize we can only go by indirect proxies like depictions of scenes in art.”
Then came Muna Island. The 2026 Nature paper pushed the record back another 16,600 years with that single hand stencil.
These ancient animal scenes and hand marks are, at their core, a record of how early humans observed and responded to the living world – the oldest surviving evidence of that instinct to capture and preserve what they saw. That impulse has not faded. The drive that sent someone into a Sulawesi cave with ochre pigment 67,800 years ago is the same drive behind every artist who has ever stood outdoors and tried to capture what they see before the light changes. Today, that same instinct continues to shape modern creative practice, with paintings of nature appearing across styles from plein air work to contemporary interpretations of landscapes.
The Leang Karampuang finding was confirmed using LA-U-series dating, a technique that can precisely date the calcium carbonate crusts that form over cave art without destroying the pigment itself. It’s why the Indonesian timeline kept shifting – not because older sites kept being found, but because dating technology finally became precise enough to read what was already there. According to the Leakey Foundation, the Leang Karampuang discovery reframes art-making as a cognitive capability fully present in the earliest populations of modern humans to reach Southeast Asia, if not earlier. The 2024 Nature paper by Oktaviana et al. remains the primary peer-reviewed source for these findings and has triggered a significant reassessment of where, and when, the human story-telling instinct first took visual form.
Animals Above All: What Ancient Artists Chose to Paint
If you spend time with the art at Lascaux, one pattern is impossible to ignore. According to the World History Encyclopedia, the cave contains approximately 600 painted and drawn animals and symbols, plus nearly 1,500 engravings. Around 365 of the depictions are horses alone. That animal count is extraordinary. What’s equally striking is the absence: Lascaux contains zero representations of plants, vegetation, or the surrounding terrain.
Ancient artists were not painting their surroundings. They were painting creatures. Animate nature, not static scenery.
This selective focus gets more interesting when you factor in what researchers call pareidolia – the tendency of human visual perception to find meaningful shapes in random patterns. A study published in the Cambridge Archaeological Journal found that as many as 71% of images studied in the Las Monedas caves showed a strong relationship to the natural features of the cave wall itself. These artists weren’t imposing images on blank stone – they were finding animals already living in the rock, tracing what they saw emerging from the natural surface. Research into how cave artists used natural rock formations to find their subjects suggests this was a consistent and widespread practice, not an occasional curiosity.
The horse-heavy composition at Lascaux raises a practical question: horses and aurochs dominate the walls, but the archaeological evidence from bone deposits shows that reindeer were the primary food source for the people who made those images. They weren’t painting what they ate. They were painting what mattered to them for reasons that had nothing to do with calories.
And it wasn’t only Homo sapiens doing this. Sites at La Pasiega, Maltravieso, and Ardales in Spain contain geometric marks and hand stencils dated to at least 64,000 years ago – before anatomically modern humans arrived in Europe. The artists were Neanderthals.
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Prehistoric cave wall with animal drawings and handprints illuminated by torchlight, showing early humans painting the natural world.
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A Global Habit: Nature Art Across Continents and Millennia
The European and Indonesian cave sites get most of the attention, but the same behavior was happening simultaneously and independently across the inhabited world. That fact is the most important one in this story.
In the Lower Pecos Canyonlands on the Texas-Mexico border, 4,200-year-old polychromatic murals stretch across rock panels more than 100 feet long. The French archaeologist Jean Clottes called the work “second to none” globally. Researcher Carolyn Boyd has described these painted panels as the oldest known books in North America – extended pictorial narratives encoding cosmological knowledge. The ancient rock art traditions of the Americas represent an entirely independent tradition that reached comparable levels of ambition and complexity without any contact with Europe or Southeast Asia.
At Serra da Capivara in Brazil, the largest and oldest concentration of prehistoric paintings in the Americas covers thousands of sites, with stone tools in the area dated to approximately 22,000 years ago. At Laas Geel in Somaliland, 5,000 to 7,000-year-old paintings show ceremonially decorated cattle, humans, and giraffes in remarkable condition – vivid, specific, observational.
Then there’s Egypt. Ancient Egyptian artworks spanning 6,000 years have been used by modern researchers to track five distinct episodes of dramatic change in the Nile Valley’s mammalian community, three of which coincide with extreme environmental shifts. Those artists weren’t thinking about ecological records. But they were observing nature so carefully and consistently that their work became one anyway.
The Smithsonian Institution’s Human Origins Program situates this kind of evidence within a broader picture of symbolic cognition developing across the human lineage over hundreds of thousands of years – a reminder that the behavior we’re tracing isn’t a cultural quirk but a deep feature of the species.
Every inhabited continent. No cultural contact between these populations. The same behavior, the same subjects.
This isn’t a tradition that spread from one point of origin. It’s a pattern that emerged wherever humans lived. That’s the only explanation that fits the geographic spread and the chronology.
Why Did They Do It? The Meaning Behind the Marks
No single theory accounts for all of prehistoric art, and anyone who tells you otherwise hasn’t spent enough time with the evidence. Ancient images carried different meanings in different contexts – and that ambiguity is part of what makes them compelling.
The oldest framework, still debated, is ritual purpose. The archaeologist André Leroi-Gourhan argued that Lascaux functioned as a sacred sanctuary used for initiation ceremonies, where the animal images had active ritual power rather than decorative function. The selective species and their spatial arrangement within the cave supported his reading.
A second argument focuses on group identity. Maxime Aubert, one of the researchers behind the Indonesian dating work, has described hand stencils in terms of belonging: “If you know about this rock art, you’re part of that group, you’re part of that culture.” On this reading, the marks are social – a way of saying we were here, this is ours, this is what we see.
Oktaviana’s work points toward a third possibility: storytelling. The narrative composition at Leang Karampuang – figures interacting around an animal in a scene with spatial and temporal logic – suggests the capacity for story-based thought was already fully developed 51,200 years ago. Art as the earliest known proxy for language.
There’s also a fourth reading that has gained traction in the last decade. Research from the University of Edinburgh found that animal symbols in European cave art encode star constellation positions and appear to mark astronomical events, including comet strikes. The work on how prehistoric cave art encoded astronomical knowledge suggests that depictions of animals functioned as a mnemonic and calendrical system going back at least 40,000 years. Art as sky-map.
These explanations don’t cancel each other out. They probably all apply, at different sites, in different periods, by different hands. What holds across all of them is that the art is consistently oriented toward the living world – its creatures, its movements, its cycles.
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Prehistoric cave painting of bison and handprints on rock wall, illuminated by firelight, showing early human connection to nature through art
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The Unbroken Thread: An Impulse That Did Not Stop
The Paleolithic didn’t end the habit. It changed the surfaces.
The animals in Egyptian tomb art are rendered with the same careful observation as the horses at Lascaux – different medium, different cosmology, the same attention to the living creature. Greek pottery carried deer, horses, and birds across thousands of vessels. Roman villa frescoes brought gardens indoors. The Minoan Spring Fresco at Akrotiri, dated to around 1,600 BCE, shows swallows arcing over wildflowers in a painting that feels startlingly immediate – light, specific, attentive to the natural world in a way that doesn’t feel remote at all.
Through the Renaissance, painters began moving outdoors to study light falling on water and trees. Through the Romantic period, artists like Constable and Turner argued that the natural world deserved to be the primary subject of serious art, not just a backdrop for human figures. Through Impressionism, the entire project became about capturing the specific quality of light at a specific moment – the same problem the Sulawesi artists were working on, in a different register.
Picasso visited Altamira and reportedly said: “After Altamira, all is decadence.” He wasn’t being modest. He recognized that the painters who worked on those walls 35,000 years ago had solved the central problem of representation with a directness that every subsequent generation has been trying to match. The 2019 exhibition at the Pompidou brought together over 300 contemporary works responding directly to prehistoric themes, materials, and techniques – artists across the world continuing a conversation that started on cave walls.
What connects all of these moments isn’t style or technique or material. It’s the experience of standing before the living world and feeling that it must be recorded. That the bison, or the swallow, or the river at a particular hour deserves to be made permanent. That observation alone isn’t enough – the observation has to be fixed, shared, given form.
That’s not a cultural preference. It’s too old and too universal for that. Seventy thousand years of evidence, on every inhabited continent, before globalization, before any mechanism that could have spread the behavior from a single origin. The only credible explanation is that this impulse came with us naturally.
A Handprint That Never Really Faded
On Muna Island, 67,800 years ago, a person stood in a cave, pressed their hand to the stone, and blew pigment until the negative space around their fingers held their shape. We don’t know their names, their language, or their beliefs. But we know they looked at the world around them and felt it was worth preserving adn recording.
New discoveries keep pushing the timeline further back. Each one adds another data point to the same story. And the story the data keeps telling is not really about art history or cultural evolution. It’s about what humans are: creatures who look at the living world and can’t leave it unmarked.
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Cover Image, Top Left: Prehistoric cave handprint beside modern landscape painting, showing evolution of humans painting the natural world.
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