27 November 2025 The Future is the Product of the Past

A cave in Argentina houses the oldest known pigment-based rock art in South America

An astounding collection of almost 900 rock paintings, dating back approximately 8,200 years, has been discovered in northwestern Argentina.

The Huenul Cave 1, a 630-square-meter rock shelter located in northern Patagonia, the interior is adorned with approximately 900 unique ancient paintings featuring an array of geometric patterns, human figures, and animal depictions. However, cave art was previously thought to have been made within the last few thousand years.

A study recently published in Science Advances found that one mysterious comblike pattern was made roughly 8,200 years ago.

Cave artists recreated the same design in black pigment for thousands of years thereafter. According to the New York Times, this design may have been used to communicate during shifts in climate change.

The enormous artwork, which features images of people, animals, and other designs, was dated by archaeologists by removing small fragments of black pigment from the drawings. Because the pigment was derived from plant matter, scientists were able to date the cave paintings using radiocarbon dating.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



Archaeologists also discovered that the black painting was made from charred wood sourced from burned bushes or cacti.

Original photograph and digital enhancement of the complete rock art panel. Photo: GUADALUPE ROMERO VILLANUEVA
Original photograph and digital enhancement of the complete rock art panel. Photo: GUADALUPE ROMERO VILLANUEVA

“[The cave] is not the oldest occupation in South America, but it is the oldest directly radiocarbon-dated pigment-based rock art in South America,” study co-author Ramiro Barberena, an archeologist at Temuco Catholic University in Chile and CONICET, told Live Science.

During the late Holocene, this region of Patagonia was known for being very dry and hot, according to the study. Therefore, researchers point out the importance of information exchange.

“These [drawings] span more or less across 3,000 years within a single motif,” Ramiro Barberena said. “We propose that there was a transmission of information across multiple human generations, which inhabited the same region and the same site.”

Over 3,000 years, the comb motif might have helped to preserve the people’s oral traditions and collective memories. Although it currently acts as a documentation of how individuals have addressed the prior climate change challenges, the motif’s meaning, and intent are still unknown.

Patagonia, a region at South America’s southern tip, was first inhabited around 12,000 years ago. Around 10,000 years ago, Patagonia became increasingly arid, making it more difficult to live there. The archaeological record in the cave suggests that the site was abandoned around this time.

Related Articles

Archaeologists Uncover Early Bronze Age Ceremonial Complex in Murayghat, Jordan

4 August 2025

4 August 2025

Archaeologists have uncovered striking evidence of an ancient ceremonial complex in Murayghat, Jordan, that could rewrite what we know about...

‘4,200-year-old Zombie grave’ discovered in Germany

22 April 2024

22 April 2024

Archaeologists excavating in East Germany have found a 4,200-year-old grave near Oppin in Saxony-Anhalt containing the skeleton of a man...

Archeologists Unearth Spectator snacks from the Roman Period in Colosseum

28 November 2022

28 November 2022

An excavation of the Colosseum’s sewer systems has uncovered a selection of spectator snacks from the Roman Period. It appears...

Collectors In The Prehistoric World Recycled Old Stone Tools To Preserve The Memory Of Their Ancestors

16 March 2022

16 March 2022

A first-of-its-kind study at Tel Aviv University asks what drove prehistoric humans to collect and recycle flint tools that had...

Archaeological Dig at Jerusalem’s Holy Sepulchre Corroborates New Testament Account of Garden

3 May 2025

3 May 2025

A significant archaeological excavation nearing its conclusion at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City has yielded...

First Visual Evidence of the Milky Way Found in Ancient Egyptian Cosmological Vignettes

1 May 2025

1 May 2025

Did ancient Egyptians gaze upon the Milky Way and immortalize its form in their artwork? New research suggests this very...

Archaeologists discover bones of a woman who lived 14,000 years ago at a site in The Iberian Peninsula

13 August 2021

13 August 2021

Archaeologists have discovered the bones of a lady who lived 14,000 years ago, the earliest traces of a modern burial...

4000-year-old Temple With A 2.30 Meters Central Monolith Discovered in Cyprus

9 July 2024

9 July 2024

An Italian archaeological mission, the Erimi Archaeological Project of the University of Siena, discovered a 4,000-year-old temple in Cyprus. This...

Archaeologists Found an Egyptian Temple Slotted into a Cliff Face, Probably Dedicated to a Lion-Headed Goddess Repit

15 December 2024

15 December 2024

Archaeologists have uncovered a hidden gateway leading to a 2,100-year-old temple built into a cliff face at the ancient city...

Part of lost star catalog of Hipparchus found hidden in Medieval parchment

22 October 2022

22 October 2022

Hipparchus’ fabled star catalog, which had been thought to be lost, was discovered concealed in a medieval parchment that had...

Archaeologists in the Tangier Peninsula Discovered Three Ancient Cemeteries, Including a Stone Burial Dating to Around 4,000 Years Ago

17 May 2025

17 May 2025

A significant archaeological discovery in northern Morocco’s Tangier Peninsula, situated just south of the Strait of Gibraltar, has led to...

Oldest found human traces on Roof of the World, Is it art?

21 October 2021

21 October 2021

Dr. David Zhang and his team’s investigations of Quesang on the Tibetan Plateau in 2018 and 2020 sparked controversy, along...

The Largest Circular Tomb of the Ancient World Is Opening

16 February 2021

16 February 2021

The restoration of Augustus’ colossal tomb, which is expected to be opened in 2014, has been completed. The Augustus mausoleum...

In a Wisconsin lake, archaeologists discover a 1,200-year-old dugout canoe

6 November 2021

6 November 2021

Maritime archaeologists from the Wisconsin Historical Society have discovered a dugout wooden canoe in Lake Mendota, Wisconsin, USA. Carbon analysis...

A monumental Etruscan tomb discovered in the necropolis of San Giuliano, north of Rome

25 February 2024

25 February 2024

After years of work, archaeologists discovered an impressive Etruscan tomb partially hidden underground in the rock-cut necropolis of San Giuliano...