World’s oldest cave art discovered in Indonesia

Published January 22, 2026
A RESEARCHER examines an ancient cave painting in a small island off Indonesia’s  Sulawesi region.—Reuters
A RESEARCHER examines an ancient cave painting in a small island off Indonesia’s Sulawesi region.—Reuters

PARIS: A red stencil of a hand pressed against the wall of an Indonesian cave is the oldest rock art ever discovered, scientists said on Wednesday, and sheds light on how humans first migrated to Australia.

The cave art dates back at least 67,800 years, according to research published in the journal Nature by a team of Indonesian and Australian archaeologists. “We have been working in Indonesia for a long time,” study co-author Maxime Aubert of Australia’s Griffith University said.

This time they ventured to caves on the island of Muna in the Sulawesi province on the advice of Indonesian archaeologist Adhi Agus Oktaviana, the study’s lead author. There they found “handprints in negative, stencilled, probably using red ochre,” Aubert said. The fingers of one of the hands were “retouched to become pointed like claws — a style of painting only seen in Sulawesi,” the Canadian archaeologist added.

To determine the art’s age, the team took five-millimetre samples from “cave popcorn”, which are small clusters of calcite that form on the walls of limestone caves. Then they zapped the layers of rock with a laser to measure how the uranium decayed over time, compared to a more stable radioactive element called thorium.

This “very precise” technique gave the scientists a clear minimum age for the painting, Aubert explained.

At 67,800 years old, the Indonesian stencil is more than a thousand years older than other hand stencils found in a Spanish cave which has been attributed to Neanderthals.

Published in Dawn, January 22nd, 2026

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