🙋♀️Hi everyone! Today is #FridayPaleoArt and we’re visiting Chufín cave in Cantabria, one of the @UNESCO World Heritage sites of Cantabrian Region.
Cave: #Chufín
Place: Riclones (Cantabria, Spain)
Motif: Red paintings and engravings
Chronology: #Premagdalenian
⁉️Chufin cave, also known as the cave of Moro Chufín, is located on a cliff above the reservoir of La Palombera, at the confluence of the rivers Lamasón and Nansa, in Cantabria. It was discovered in 1972 by Manuel de Cos Borbolla and the reservoir guard Primo González. ⚓️
➡️The rock art of this cave is made up of two main groups: the indoor paintings and the outer engravings. The group of red paintings inside the cave was discovered on 30 March 1972, and shortly afterwards Martín Almagro identified the group of rock engravings on the outside.
❗️The engravings are distributed in three sectors of the vestibule, although altered due to conservation problems. There are some sets of fine lines and, in the central sector, a set of thick, abrasive lines in which at least 16 trilinear hinds can be distinguished.👇😉
📖These hinds, superimposed one on top of the other, stand out for the anatomical schematic outline of their lines, consisting of three or four lines, which make up the outline, the ears and one leg per pair. In some cases, there is also a small line indicating the mouth. 📸
📚The interior of the cave has red paintings and, to a lesser extent, some engravings, specifically a possible bird figure with fine lines and an anthropomorphic figure. The red paint represents zoomorphic figures, an auroch and a horse, and dotted signs (Almagro, 1973).
🤔The dotted signs, made by digitations, form alignments of dots in parallel, tangent, or concentric bands, with one group standing out around a small vault on a rocky visor, which was interpreted as a vulva (Almagro, Cabrera y Bernardo de Quirós, 1977).💭
👉The technical and stylistic analysis of this rock art dates it in the ancient chronological stages of the Upper Palaeolithic. The fine interior and exterior engravings and the red paintings would be Aurignacian and/or Gravetian and the deep exterior engravings Upper Solutrean .
⁉️ The cave of Moro Chufín owes its name to a legend about a Moor who had buried a treasure in it. As a result of this legend, the cave, known since immemorial time by the locals, had been looted in search of this treasure.
📖In 1974, Cabrera and Bernardo de Quirós began its excavation using archaeological methodology in two areas of the vestibule. They located a room structure that was dated to the Upper Solutrean and two other stratigraphic layers below it (Cabrera Valdés, 1977).
❗️Exciting news! In September, the BeforeART team will start a new project to excavate the site and study the rock art at the Chufín cave site in order to deepen the about who were the people who made this art and how they lived.❗️
Puy Jarrige II cave is located in the commune of Brive, in "Les Rebières". More precisely, it is located in a Triassic sandstone, on the right side of the Courolle valley, near the Corrèze river. There is a cave called Puy Jarrige I, but it has only archaeological deposits.
▶️Puy Jarrige II is a small cave barely 10 metres long. Two spaces can be distinguished: a shelter and a diverticulum. Apart from the Palaeolithic engravings, there are medieval remains in some parts of the cave.
☕️Good morning friends! 🗺️Today we travel very far to bring you the fantastic landscape of Lim Channel in Istria… well the underground one! Let’s start with Romualdova cave!
⁉️Pal. rock art is especially preserved in the karstic regions of Western Europe. To the East, rock art becomes more unusual. In fact, until 2010 there was not any remaining of this kind in the Balkans. Fortunately, things are changing thanks to the hard work of archaeologists.
➡️In 2017, a survey project was carried out under the direction of our friend Aitor Ruiz-Redondo @unizar @PALAEOARTEAST project. 44 red graphic units were identified, divided in four panels: a bison, an ibex (📸), a vulva, 2 anthropomorphic and several dots, lines and marks.
☕️Hi! #goodmorning on this rainy sunday!
Yesterday we presented a very interesting discovery made in a cave where we are working now... #Alkerdi2 in #UrdazubiUrdax... let's start this thread!!👇😉
Last summer we received an email from @rturoTroska, from the caving group #Satorrak, working within a project coordinated from @aranzadi in the exploration of the Alkerdi/Berroberria massif. They discovered a new passage with engravings and paintings.. the access was not easy👇❗️
⁉️The new passage contains (at least) 3 engraved bison, 3 aurochs, 2 horses and 2 undefined animals, as well as 5 groups of paired strokes in red.
👇📸But it starts with engraved 4 vulvas, so it was called #Aluengalería (vulva in basque) by its discoverers.
☕️Good morning to all! In today’s first #FridayPaleoArt of #October1st we are going to look for the prehistoric hunters through Paleolithic art.
Cave: #PechMerle
Place: Cabrerets, Lot, Francia
Motif: Wounded Man. Gallery of the Wounded Man
Chronology: Possibly #Solutrean
👇😉
Today we are going to visit a well-known cave for its great animal representations, especially the spotted horses, but what about the humans?
Although this cave was known to locals, it was not until 1922 that the speleologist A. David, his sister Martha and Henri Dutertre, discovered the so-called “decorated cave.” Later, the parietal study was carried out by A. Lemozi, A. Leroi-Gourhan and M. Lorblanchet.
➡️Specifically, these days we have carried out an Experimental Archeology work that will help us to characterize the combustion residues of the Paleolithic lamp located in the #Atxurra cave, as well as to know its thermo-dynamic operation and the type of lighting.