Hands Stencils in El Castillo Cave (Puente Viesgo, Cantabria, Spain). An Interdisciplinary Study

Our Palaeolithic ancestors did not make good representations of themselves on the rocky surfaces of caves and barring certain exceptions – such as the case of La Marche (found on small slabs of stone or plaquettes) or the Cueva de Ambrosio – the few known examples can only be referred to as anthropo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 2021-12, Vol.87, p.51-71
Hauptverfasser: Ripoll, Sergio, Bayarri, Vicente, Muñoz, Francisco J., Ortega, Ricardo, Castillo, Elena, Latova, José, Herrera, Jesús, Moreno-Salinas, David, Martín, Ignacio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Our Palaeolithic ancestors did not make good representations of themselves on the rocky surfaces of caves and barring certain exceptions – such as the case of La Marche (found on small slabs of stone or plaquettes) or the Cueva de Ambrosio – the few known examples can only be referred to as anthropomorphs. As such, only hand stencils give us a real picture of the people who came before us. Hand stencils and imprints provide us with a large amount of information that allows us to approach not only their physical appearance but also to infer less tangible details, such as the preferential use of one hand over the other (i.e., handedness). Both new and/or mature technologies as well as digital processing of images, computers with the ability to process very high resolution images, and a more extensive knowledge of the Palaeolithic figures all help us to analyse thoroughly the hands in El Castillo cave. The interdisciplinary study presented here contributes many novel developments based on real data, representing a major step forward in knowledge about our predecessors.
ISSN:0079-497X
2050-2729
DOI:10.1017/ppr.2021.11