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17,000-year-old stripes of red in a Welsh cave are the oldest rock art in the UK, study finds

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CitrixNews Staff
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17,000-year-old stripes of red in a Welsh cave are the oldest rock art in the UK, study finds
two views of a rock art panel The panel in 2024 (left) and a software-enhanced version of the photo (right). (Image credit: Nash et al. 2026 / Quaternary) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

For a century, experts dismissed a series of parallel red lines discovered in a Welsh cave as a phenomenon of nature rather than human-made rock art. But a new study shows the lines are a rare example of Paleolithic art — and at 17,000 years old, they're the earliest example of rock art in the British Isles.

Bacon Hole is a cave in the limestone cliffs of Gower, a peninsula in southwest Wales. In 1912, a team of geologists and archaeologists found a panel deep within the cave covered in a series of 11 horizontal lines.

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Article Sources

Nash, G.H., Collado, H., Gomes, H., Garcês, S., Lattao, V., Rosina, P., Marrocchino, E., Eftekhari, N., Oosterwijk, B., Pike, A.W.G., Hoffmann, D.L., Standish, C.D., Hiemstra, J.F., Shao, Q. (2026). Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic painted imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Quaternary. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043

Kristina KillgroveKristina KillgroveStaff writer

Kristina Killgrove is a staff writer at Live Science with a focus on archaeology and paleoanthropology news. Her articles have also appeared in venues such as Forbes, Smithsonian, and Mental Floss. Kristina holds a Ph.D. in biological anthropology and an M.A. in classical archaeology from the University of North Carolina, as well as a B.A. in Latin from the University of Virginia, and she was formerly a university professor and researcher. She has received awards from the Society for American Archaeology and the American Anthropological Association for her science writing.

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Originally reported by Live Science