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Cueva de las Manos

Coordinates: 47°09′21″S 70°39′26″W / 47.155774°S 70.657256°W / -47.155774; -70.657256
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Cueva de las Manos
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Hands, at the Cave of the Hands
Official nameCueva de las Manos, Río Pinturas
LocationSanta Cruz, Argentina
CriteriaCultural: (iii)
Reference936
Inscription1999 (23rd Session)
Area600 ha (1,500 acres)
Buffer zone2,331 ha (5,760 acres)
Coordinates47°09′21″S 70°39′26″W / 47.155774°S 70.657256°W / -47.155774; -70.657256
Cueva de las Manos is located in Santa Cruz Province
Cueva de las Manos
Location of Cueva de las Manos in Santa Cruz Province
Cueva de las Manos is located in Argentina
Cueva de las Manos
Cueva de las Manos (Argentina)

Cueva de las Manos (Spanish for Cave of the Hands or Cave of Hands) is a cave and complex of rock art sites in the province of Santa Cruz, Argentina, 163 km (101 mi) south of the town of Perito Moreno. It is named for the hundreds of hand paintings stenciled into multiple collages on the rock walls. The art in the cave dates to between 11,000 to 7,000 BC, during the Archaic period of Pre-Columbian South America, or the late Pleistocene to early Holocene geological periods. Several waves of people occupied the cave over time as evidenced by some of the early artwork that has been radiocarbon dated to about 7300 BC. The age of the paintings was calculated from the remains of bone-made pipes used for spraying the paint on the wall of the cave to create the stenciled artwork of the hand collages. The site is considered by some scholars to be the best material evidence of South American early hunter-gatherer groups.

The site was last inhabited around 700 AD, possibly by ancestors of the Tehuelche people. Argentine surveyor and archaeologist Carlos J. Gradin and his team conducted the most important research on the site in 1964, when they began excavating sites during a 30-year study of cave art in and around Cueva de las Manos. The importance of his discoveries to the country's natural and cultural heritage resulted in the site being named a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site in 1999. The site is a National Historic Monument and a National Historic Site in Argentina.

Location

Photograph of the entrance to the cave in a sheer rock face
Entrance to the Cave of the Hands

The cave lies in the valley of the Pinturas River, in an isolated location in the Patagonian landscape.[1] The area itself is on the upper part of the Deseado Basin, at the base of a stepped cliff[2][3] in the Pinturas Canyon.[4] It lies around 165 kilometers (103 mi) south of Perito Moreno, a town in northwest Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.[5][6] The site is part of Perito Moreno National Park,[7] as well as the Cueva de las Manos Provincial Park.[8]

Climate

The climate of the cave area can best be described as precordilleran steppe (or "grassy foothills").[9][10] The climate is cold and dry,[11] with very low humidity;[12] the area receives a total annual precipitation of less than 20 millimeters (0.79 in) per year.[13] The topography of the canyon prevents the strong westward winds that are natural to the region, making winters in the area less severe.[14]

Access

There are three main access points to the cave: Estancia Cueva de las Manos, from Bajo Caracoles, and a midway access road between the two points.[15] The cave is most easily reached by a gravel road, which leaves Ruta 40 (Route 40)[6] north of Bajo Caracoles and runs 43 km (27 mi) northeast to the south side of the Pinturas Canyon.[15] The north side of the canyon can be reached by rough, but shorter, roads from Ruta 40.[16] A 3 km (1.9 mi) path connects the two sides of the canyon, but there is no road link.[17][15]

History

Four Llama-like guanacos on a rock cliff with the ocean in the background
Herd of guanacos on marine sediments of Monte Leon fm. (Oligocene-Miocene), at what is known as Head of the Lion, Santa Cruz, Argentina

The Pinturas and Deseado Rivers drained into the Atlantic Ocean, and provided water for herds of guanacos, making the area attractive to Paleoindians.[18] As the glacial ice fields melted, the Baker River captured the drainage of the eastward flowing rivers and redirected the flow to the Pacific Ocean.[18] This led to a progressive abandonment of the Las Manos site.[18]

Projectile points, a bola stone fragment, and side-scrapers have been found alongside guanaco, puma, fox, bird and other small animals' remains at the site.[3][19] The natives used bolas and ambush tactics to hunt guanacos, their primary food source.[a][20][21] The Pre-Columbian economy of Patagonia as a whole depended on hunting-gathering. Francisco Mena states in "...[in the] Middle to Late Holocene Adaptations in Patagonia ... neither agriculture nor fully fledged pastoralism ever emerged."[22] Carlos Gradin remarked in his writings that all the rock art in the area shows the hunter-gatherer lifestyle of the artists who made it.[23]

Various groups inhabited the Las Manos site, including the long-since vanished Toldense people who lived in the caves until the third or second millennium BC.[24] The site was last inhabited around 700 AD, with the final cave dwellers possibly being ancestors of the Tehuelche tribes.[25][26][27] The existence of obsidian in the area—which is not natural to the region—implies a broad-ranging network of trade between peoples of the cave area and distant tribal groups.[28]

Father Alberto Maria de Agostini first wrote about the site in 1941 AD.[29][30]

Cave

Entrance to a cave
The entrance of the cave

The main cave is about 66 feet (20 meters) deep, and is composed of the cave itself, two outcroppings, and the walls at either side of the entrance.[31] The entrance faces approximately northeast and is about 50 feet (15 meters) in height by 50 feet (15 meters) wide.[31] The paintings on the cave's wall span about 200 by 650 feet (61 m × 198 m).[31] The initial height of the cave is 33 ft (10 m).[32] The ground inside has an upward slope; as a result, the height is eventually reduced to no more than 2 m (6.6 ft).[32]

Artwork

Cueva de las Manos is named for the hundreds of hand paintings stenciled into multiple collages on the rock walls.[33] The art in the Cueva de las Manos is some of the most important art in the New World, and by far the most famous among rock art in the Patagonian region.[20][26][34][35] The art dates to between 11,000 to 7,000 BC,[36] during the Archaic period of Pre-Columbian South America,[37][38] or the late Pleistocene to early Holocene geological periods.[26][39] The oldest-known cave paintings in South America are contained within the cave.[40]

The artwork not only decorates the interior of the cave but also the surrounding cliff faces and exterior.[41] The cave's art can be divided by subject into three basic categories: people, the animals they ate, and the human hand.[20] Inhabitants of the Las Manos site hunted guanacos for survival; a dependency that is reflected in their artwork as totemic-like depictions of the creatures.[20]

The artwork's authenticity has been verified.[4] Several waves of people occupied the cave over time as evidenced by some of the early artwork that has been radiocarbon dated to about 7300 BC.[25] The age of the paintings was calculated from the remains of bone-made pipes used for spraying the paint on the wall of the cave to create the stenciled artwork of the hand collages.[42] According to Fanning et al., it is "...the best material evidence of early hunter gatherer groups in South America."[27]

Forms

The works in the cave can be described as naturalistic.[36] Over time, they gradually became more stylized.[20][4]

There are over 2,000 handprints in and around the cave.[32] Most of the images are painted as negatives or stencilled, alongside some positive handprints.[43] A survey in the 1970s counted 829 left hands to 31 right.[30][44] This suggests that painters held the spray pipe (possibly made from a bird bone) with their right hand.[43][45][46] Some hands are missing fingers, which could be due to necrosis, amputation, or deformity, but might indicate the use of sign language or bending fingers to convey meaning.[47][48]

The varying depth of the rock face forms the literal space of the works, and the different depths from the viewer alters the way the images are seen based on where the viewer is standing. There is a large amount of superimpositioning (overlap) of the hands in different areas as well,[20][4] with some areas of the art containing so much that the hands form a palimpsest background of layered color.[49][50] Along with the superimpositioned masses of images, there are many purposefully placed single hands.[50]

Zigzag patterns alongside hands, dots, and guanacos.

There are also depictions of human beings, guanacos (Lama guanicoe),[25] rheas, felines and other animals, as well as geometric shapes, zigzag patterns, representations of the sun, and hunting scenes.[32][46] The hunting scenes are naturalistic portrayals of a variety of hunting techniques, including the use of bolas.[a][25][21] Similar paintings, though in smaller numbers, can be found in nearby caves. There are also red dots on the ceilings, probably made by submerging their hunting bolas in ink, and then throwing them up.[4][46]

The same wildlife depicted in the artwork exists in the area today.[41][7] Most prominent among the animals are the guanacos, upon which the natives depended for survival.[20] There are repeated scenes of guanacos being surrounded as they are hunted,[32] suggesting that this was the preferred tactic for killing the creatures.[20]

Cultural Context

Little is known about the culture of those who made these works aside from the tools they used and what they hunted. One is left to speculate about their culture and what life was like in the societies that created it.[39][20] The art shows the people of this area were not merely restricted to stone tools and subsistence, but had a symbolic element to their culture.[39]

Purpose

The exact function or purpose of this art is unknown, although some findings have suggested it may have had a religious or ceremonial purpose[20][51] as well as a decorative one.[47] Some would say that hands are indicative of the human desire to be remembered,[45] or to record that they were there.[46][52] That so many people contributed to the artwork for thousands of years suggests the cave held great significance for the artists who painted on its walls.[4] The fact that a large number of people gathered in one place to contribute to the rock art for such a long period, shows a large cultural significance, or at least usefulness,[b] to those who participated.[4]

Materials

The binder used in the artwork is unknown but the mineral pigments include iron oxides, producing reds and purples; kaolin, producing white; natrojarosite, producing yellow; manganese oxide (pyrolusite),[13] which makes black; and copper oxide,[c] making green.[56][25][7] Haematite, goethite, and green earth have also been detected.[13] Moreover, Wainwright et al. state that "gypsum, quartz, and calcium oxalate have been admixed with the pigments".[13]

Stylistic Groups

Significant research and archaeology on the rock art of the cave has led specialists to categorize the art into four stylistic groups, proposed by Carlos Gradin and adapted and modified by others:[57] A, B, B1, and C,[58] also known as Río Pinturas I, II, III, and IV, respectively.[4] These stylistic groups, separated into three phases of production, cover a time period of around eight millennia.[26] The first two groups were partly conceived to differentiate group A's dynamic depiction of guanacos from group B's static depiction of them.[58]

Stylistic Group A

Stylistic Group A (also known as Río Pinturas I) is the art of the first hunter-gatherers who lived in the area,[4] and is the oldest style in the cave, which can be traced as far back to around 7,300 BC.[27][26][20] The style is naturalistic and dynamic, and encompasses polychrome, dynamic hunting scenes along with negative human hand motifs.[26][4] The imagery takes advantage of the grooves in the rock face itself to form part of the art.[4] The hunters depicted in the scenes were likely long distance hunters, and the hunting scenes often depicted ambush or surround tactics being used when hunting guanacos.[4]

It is likely that the eruption of the Hudson volcano around 4770/4675 BC caused the end of this stylistic group.[59]

Stylistic Groups B and B1

See caption
Photo of a humanoid and guanacos.

A new cultural group, entering the scene before 5,000 BC, until around 1,300 BC, created the art of what is now considered stylistic groups B (Río Pinturas II) and B1 (Río Pinturas III).[4]

Around 5,000 BC, Group B was born.[26] Static, isolated groups of guanacos with large bellies, possibly pregnant, replace the lively hunting scenes that marked the previous group.[26][4][60] Large groups of superimposed handprints, numbering around 2,000, in many colors, are associated with Group B,[4] as are some more rare motifs of human and animal footprints.[20]

In Group B1, composing what could be considered the latter part of Group B, the forms become more and more schematic, and figures, human and animal, become more stylized;[61] the group includes hand stencils, bola marks, and dotted line patterns.[4][26]

Stylistic Group C

Stylistic Group C, Río Pinturas IV, begins around 700 AD and marks the last of the stylistic sequences in the cave.[4][26] The group focuses around abstract geometric figures[26] including highly schematic silhouettes of both animal and human figures, alongside circles, zigzag patterns, dots, and more hands superimposed onto larger groups of hands.[4][26] The primary color is red.[4][26]

Cultural impact

Photograph of tourists visiting the cave
Tourists visiting the cave.

Every February the nearby town of Moreno hosts a celebration in honor of the caves[4][62] called Festival Folkólorico Cueva de las Manos.[63] Significant numbers of tourists visit the cave,[23] which is known worldwide.[3][2][64] The site's addition as a UNESCO World Heritage Site has contributed to this effect, acting as a type of "quality seal" for potential tourists and the global cultural tourism industry.[65] The cave and its paintings have served as the inspiration and setting for the popular children's book Ghost Hands, written by T. A. Barron and illustrated by William Low.[66]

Studies and preservation

Photograph of the boardwalk and fence at the Cave of the Hands
Boardwalk and fence at the Cave of the Hands.

Argentine surveyor and archaeologist Carlos Gradin and his team conducted the most profound research on the site in 1964, when they began a 30-year-long study of the caves and their art.[67][20] In his studies, Gradin has helped to separate the different stylistic sequences of the cave.[4]

Cueva de las Manos is a National Historic Monument in Argentina,[68] and has been listed as a National Historic Site since 1993.[69] It has also been listed as a World Heritage Site since 1999.[12] In 2018, the site received its own provincial park.[8]

The park faces new setbacks to its preservation in recent times, particularly from tourism. The number of tourists visiting the site has increased by a factor of four since its inclusion on the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1999.[70] This large influx of tourists has brought new challenges for those seeking to preserve the site.[4] Currently, the most significant threat is graffiti.[13][68] Other forms of vandalism, such as visitors taking pieces of painted rock from the walls and touching the paintings with their hands, have also left damage and contributed to the overall negative impact of tourism.[12]

In response to these issues, the site is closed off with chain-link fencing[68][71] with a boardwalk to secure the site from the demands of increased ecotourism.[72][70] The boardwalk helps to control the movements of visitors and serves as a convenient walkway.[70] The site has also been equipped with sanctioned walking trails, a guide lodge, railings and a parking lot.[23] A team of professionals from Argentina's National Anthropological Institute (INAPL) and the National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) supervised the construction of these facilities.[23] An awareness program has also been undertaken to educate tourists and visitors to the site, including local guides,[72][73] and to facilitate greater involvement by local communities.[23] To access the site, visitors must be accompanied by a tour guide.[74][71]

Despite these essential measures taken to protect the site, the local provincial government,[72] the Argentinian government, and the UNESCO have been criticized for not doing enough to protect it.[75] The provincial government in particular has been criticized for falling short of the recommendations of the INAPL, including the need for additional staffing and a permanent on-site archaeologist.[72]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Bolas were weapons designed with cords, having weights on each end that were thrown at the legs of animals to trap them allowing them to be killed by hunters.
  2. ^ One theory posits that perhaps the art served as boundary markers between peoples, showing territoriality as well as ensuring the cooperation of others by functioning as aggregation sites.[53] There is also speculation that the works were part of hunting magic,[54][55] although this is largely unproven.
  3. ^ This pigment is used more rarely, having been drawn from a source 150 kilometers (93 mi) away.[56]

References

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  2. ^ a b Mena, McEwan & Borrero (1997), p. 38
  3. ^ a b c Borrero, Luis Alberto (1999). "The Prehistoric Exploration and Colonization of Fuego-Patagonia". Journal of World Prehistory. 13 (3): 339–340. doi:10.1023/A:1022341730119. S2CID 161836687 – via EBSCO.
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  22. ^ Mena, McEwan & Borrero (1997), pp. 46–47
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  24. ^ Orquera (1987), p. 370
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  30. ^ a b Podestá, María Mercedes; Raffino, Rodolfo A.; Paunero, Rafael Sebastián; Rolandi, Diana S. (2005). El arte rupestre de Argentina indígena: Patagonia (in Spanish). Grupo Abierto Communicaciones. ISBN 978-987-1121-16-8.
  31. ^ a b c Schobinger (2016), p. 40
  32. ^ a b c d e Menon (2010), p. 243
  33. ^ Shally-Jensen, Michael (2015). Countries, Peoples & Cultures: Central & South America. Vol. 1 (First ed.). Ipswich, Massachusetts: Salem Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-1-61925-788-7. OCLC 915346551. Accession Number: 1046890 – via EBSCO.
  34. ^ Menon (2010), p. 30: "Cave paintings from much earlier epochs have been discovered in several provinces, the most famous being Cueva de las Manos in Patagonia (see p243)."
  35. ^ Funari, Pedro Paulo A.; Zarankin, A.; Stovel, E. (2009). "South American Archaeology". In Cunliffe, Barry W.; Gosden, Chris; Joyce, Rosemary A. (eds.). The Oxford handbook of archaeology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 986. ISBN 978-0-19-927101-6. OCLC 277205272. This is perhaps the best-known site in the country, because of its evocative zoomorphic, anthromorphic, and geometric rock-art panels.
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  44. ^ References to the survey:
  45. ^ a b Parfit, Michael (December 2000). "Hunt for the First Americans". National Geographic. Vol. 198, no. 6. National Geographic Society. p. 40.
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  47. ^ a b Sraj, Shafic (2015-01-01). "The Hand in Art: The Hand Was First in Art". The Journal of Hand Surgery. A Touch of Humanity. 40 (1). Elsevier: 140. doi:10.1016/j.jhsa.2014.10.045. PII S0363-5023(14)01496-8.
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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Aschero, Carlos A. "Las escenas de caza en Cueva de las Manos: una perspectiva regional (Santa Cruz, Argentina)". (in Spanish). L’Art Pléistocène dans le Monde (2012): 140–141.
  • Gradin, Carlos J.; Aguerre, Ana M.; Mattar, Munir (1995). Cueva de las Manos: Perito Moreno, Provincia de Santa Cruz (Argentina) /[este folleto ha sido redactado por Carlos J. Gradin, Ana M. Aguerre y Munir C. Mattar. (in Spanish). Hotel Belgrano. OCLC 978195249.
  • Gradin, C.J. & A.M. Aguerre (1994). Contribución a la Arqueología del Río Pinturas. (in Spanish). Santa Cruz Province. Concepción del Uruguay, Arg.: Búsqueda de Ayllu.
  • Gradin, C. J. (1983). "El arte rupestre de la cuenca del Río Pinturas, Provincia de Santa Cruz, República Argentina", Acta praehistorica, 2
  • Aguerre, Ana M. (1977). "Nuevo fechado radiocarbónico para la Cueva de las Manos (Santa Cruz)". Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropología. 11. hdl:10915/25256. ISSN 0325-2221.
  • Gradin, Carlos J.; Aschero, Carlos; Aguerre, Ana M. (1976). "Investigaciones arqueológicas en la Cueva de las Manos, Alto Río Pinturas, Santa Cruz". Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropología. tomo 10. hdl:10915/25285. OCLC 696124191.
  • Gradin, C. J.; Aschero, C.A.; & Aguerre, A. M. (1977). "Investigaciones arqueológicas en la Cueva de las Manos (Alto Río Pinturas, Santa Cruz)" (in Spanish). Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropología. 10: 201–270.
  • Arte y paisaje en cueva de las manos. Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano: Secretaría de Cultura de la Presidencia de la Nación. 1999. ISBN 978-987-95383-8-8. LCCN 2003429491. OCLC 61687026.
  • Jorge Prelorán (1971/1981). Manos Pintadas (Painted Hands) (film)

External links