Turns out humans have been finger painting for thousands of years.
These stencils and paintings, discovered decades ago in prehistoric caves in Indonesia, have just been confirmed as some the oldest in the world. Scientists now think they were made around 40,000 years ago.
Maxime Aubert, a scientist from Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia, analysed mineral deposits associated with 12 human hand stencils and two depictions of animals in the caves.
Kinez Riza / Nature
A painting of a babirusa (also known as a pig-deer), was dated to at least 35,400 years ago.
Kinez Riza / Nature
They found that the oldest image is at least 39,900 years old, making it the oldest hand stencil in the world.
This sort of art has been found before, but mostly in Europe. Scientists are yet to discover whether it developed independently across the world, or was already integral to human culture as people spread out from Africa into Asia and Australia, and then on to Europe.
Kinez Riza / Nature
LINK: The results are published in Nature today.
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