Elsevier

Science Bulletin

Volume 66, Issue 24, 30 December 2021, Pages 2506-2515
Science Bulletin

Article
Earliest parietal art: hominin hand and foot traces from the middle Pleistocene of Tibet

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scib.2021.09.001Get rights and content
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Abstract

At Quesang on the Tibetan Plateau we report a series of hand and foot impressions that appear to have been intentionally placed on the surface of a unit of soft travertine. The travertine was deposited by water from a hot spring which is now inactive and as the travertine lithified it preserved the traces. On the basis of the sizes of the hand and foot traces, we suggest that two track-makers were involved and were likely children. We interpret this event as a deliberate artistic act that created a work of parietal art. The travertine unit on which the traces were imprinted dates to between ∼169 and 226 ka BP. This would make the site the earliest currently known example of parietal art in the world and would also provide the earliest evidence discovered to date for hominins on the High Tibetan Plateau (above 4000 m a.s.l.). This remarkable discovery adds to the body of research that identifies children as some of the earliest artists within the genus Homo.

Keywords

Tibet
Parietal art
Ichnology
Hominin

Cited by (0)

David D. Zhang received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Manchester in 1991. He worked in the fields of historical climate change and social responses, geomorphology, geochemistry and environmental archaeology at the universities of Manchester, West Indies and Hong Kong for 30 years. He was a chair of Department of Geography in the University of Hong Kong and recently moved to Guangzhou University as a distinguished professor.

Matthew Bennett is a professor at Bournemouth University. He is a geologist specializing in the study of human trace fossils such as footprints. He has written several books on human ichnology (trace fossils) and has worked throughout the world at a range of different track sites. He also translates this research into forensic practice and the study of footwear marks at crime scenes.

Hai Cheng received his Ph.D. degree in geochemistry at Nanjing University in 1988 and is currently a full professor at Xi’an Jiaotong University. He has been at the leading edge in U-series developments to address fundamental questions in forefronts of paleoclimatology, paleoceanography, and global climate change. He is also one of world-leading experts on speleothem paleoclimate studies and plays an important role in reconstructing climate history in numerous climate realms.