What at first glance appears to be graffiti tagged on a rock wall is, in fact, artwork created by the first human settlers of this remote region deep in Argentine Patagonia. It"s thought that the cave paintings were made between 13,000 and 9,500 years ago. The archaeological site is known in Spanish as the Cueva de las Manos (Cave of the Hands). It"s the largest display of prehistoric handprints in the world, made all those years ago by people holding a hand against the rock wall and blowing pigments through tubes made of bone. Of the 829 black, white, red, and ochre prints, most are of young male hands. One print has six fingers, and only 31 are of right hands.
International Day of the World s Indigenous Peoples
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Red skies at Ruby Beach
-
World Octopus Day
-
Victory Day in Valletta
-
Horseshoe Bend, Arizona
-
Shi Shi Beach, Olympic National Park, Washington
-
Shadows on the solstice
-
Chilling out in the Arctic
-
Wildebeests in Maasai Mara, Kenya
-
Explorer of the sea
-
Aerial view of the Colorado River Delta in Mexico
-
Village of Oia in Santorini, Greece
-
A holiday beacon of light
-
Get on your bike and ride
-
Grizzly bears in Alaska for National Wildlife Day
-
La Rocque Harbour, Island of Jersey
-
Sundance Film Festival opens in Park City
-
Winter Olympics in Beijing
-
World Population Day
-
Overlooking the Douro
-
Al-Khazneh in Petra, Jordan
-
Hello, harbinger of spring
-
Groundhog Day
-
Today is World Refugee Day
-
The dog days of summer
-
Remembering the Arizona
-
A peek at an explosive peak
-
A gentle wind fills this sail
-
A Eurasian lynx in Siberia
-
Goodbye, 2020!
-
World Book Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

