17,100-Year-Old Cave Markings in Wales Confirmed as Britain’s Oldest Known Prehistoric Art

A series of red-painted stripes hidden inside a cave in Wales and long dismissed as a natural geological phenomenon have now been confirmed as the oldest known prehistoric artwork in Britain and northwestern Europe, according to groundbreaking new research.

The discovery centers on a panel of red horizontal markings found inside Bacon Hole, a coastal cave near Mumbles in South Wales. Scientists have determined that the markings were deliberately created by humans approximately 17,100 years ago, during the late Ice Age.

The red stripes were first identified as prehistoric art in 1912 by archaeologists William Sollas and Henri Breuil. However, later researchers concluded that the markings were likely caused by natural mineral deposits seeping through the rock, and the site gradually faded from academic attention.

More than a century later, an international team of researchers led by archaeologist George Harold Nash returned to the cave to re-examine the markings using modern scientific methods.

Their findings, published in the journal Quaternary, confirmed that the pigment was intentionally applied by human hands rather than formed through natural processes. Researchers found that the red lines are evenly spaced and arranged in a structured pattern, strongly indicating deliberate artistic creation.

Laboratory analysis of pigment samples, conducted by scientists from China, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Wales, revealed evidence that the paint was applied using a finger. This supports the original conclusions reached by Sollas and Breuil more than a century ago.

The rediscovery establishes the Bacon Hole markings as the oldest known cave art ever identified in Britain and the wider northwestern European region.

Nash described the moment of confirmation as both emotional and historic, noting that the artwork had effectively been lost to scientific research for generations before being rediscovered and properly understood.

Researchers believe the artwork was created during a period when the region was emerging from a harsh glacial climate. At the time, caves along the South Wales coastline likely served as shelters for hunter-fisher-gatherer communities.

However, experts suggest the cave had a significance that extended beyond simple habitation. Across Europe, prehistoric cave art is often associated with ritual practices, symbolic communication, and expressions of belief systems.

The study notes that the full importance of the markings may have been overlooked for decades because later graffiti left by a local fisherman in 1894 complicated interpretation of the cave walls.

Today, Bacon Hole sits within limestone cliffs overlooking the Bristol Channel and is managed by National Trust Wales. The organization, together with the Bradshaw Foundation, has supported scientific investigations at the site.

Although National Trust Wales has not yet formally designated Bacon Hole as a site of special archaeological significance, researchers are calling for the highest level of legal protection to preserve the fragile artwork.

Experts warn that prehistoric art is exceptionally rare and vulnerable to damage, emphasizing that once such cultural treasures are lost, they can never be replaced.

The discovery not only rewrites Britain’s artistic history but also offers a rare glimpse into the symbolic and cultural lives of Ice Age communities that inhabited the region more than 17 millennia ago.

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