The climate crisis is irrevocably damaging the world’s oldest cave art
Stenciled with red pigments, the drawings make the ancient humans who placed their palms on the cool cave so long ago feel tantalizingly close.
The art in the limestone caves in this region of southern Sulawesi are the earliest known examples of artistic creativity on the planet — older than much of the prehistoric cave art in Europe — and they are being damaged by the impact of the climate crisis in the tropical region, a new study published Thursday warns.
Tragically, the damage is likely irreversible, said Jill Huntley, the lead author of the study and a research fellow at the Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit at Griffith University in Australia. The findings come as the world has only just started to realize the global significance of the art and what it tells us about the early story of humanity.
The Australian and Indonesian researchers examined 11 caves and rock-shelters in the Maros-Pangkep region — which feature art dating from 45,000 to 20,000 years old — including the one with handprints. The scientists found that the art, which is made with red and mulberry pigments, is being physically weathered by a process known as haloclasty — when salt crystals form as a result of repeated changes in temperature and humidity.
“Salts are ubiquitous on the cave and rock-shelter surfaces in southern Sulawesi. These salts are chemically weakening the rock and mechanically separating the surface of the panels from the limestone walls and ceilings,” Huntley explained.
The authors believed this process is being caused by alternating periods of seasonal rainfall and drought that are being accelerated by the global climate crisis and El NiƱo weather pattens, with the tropical environment making the exceptionally old cave art particularly vulnerable.
“Climate change impacts are worse in the equatorial tropics — Australasia — because of the unique climate here. It is the most atmospherically dynamic place on Earth. Also, the tropics can experience up to three times the temperature increases under climate change compared to other parts of the world,” Huntley said.
The researchers say the caves need to have the same level of physical and chemical monitoring that has been going on for decades at famous French and Spanish prehistoric cave art sites like Lascaux and Altamira.
A small-scale monitoring program by the cultural heritage agency Balai Pelestarian Cagar Budaya has recently started in Maros-Pangkep, but more support for this initiative is required, especially infrastructure investment, the study said.
‘Race against time’
The French and Spanish cave art sites are located in a more stable, temperate climate than the Indonesian artwork, Huntley said.
“The other difference is, those caves are very deep and the art is most often in the ‘dark zone’. In Australasia art is generally in the light zone or entrances of caves and rockshelter. There are paintings deep in caves (in) the Maros-Pangkep, but the vast majority are in the parts (indirect) light reaches,” she said in an email.
That location means that the Indonesian artwork is more vulnerable to weathering, she explained.
Initially thought to be fewer than 10,000 years old, the most recent dating techniques suggested that one scene depicting three warty pigs was painted prior to 45,500 years ago — which would make it the oldest figurative art ever found.
Adhi Agus Oktaviana, a rock art expert at Indonesia’s National Research Centre for Archaeology and a doctoral student at Griffith University, said the true extent of the region’s rock art remains unknown.
“We have recorded over 300 cave art sites in Maros-Pangkep. Our teams continue to survey the area, finding new artworks every year. Almost without exception the paintings are exfoliating and in advanced stages of decay. We are in a race against time,” he said in a news statement.