Handprints of Children in Tibet May Not Be the World's Oldest Art

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Handprints of Children in Tibet May Not Be the World's Oldest Art

Given that the earliest human presence attributed to the Nwya Devu site, on the Central Tibetan Plateau is from the Late Pleistocene

they used uranium-thorium dating to determine the age of the tracks, and results published three years later showed that the tracks, were made in the Middle Pleistocene, between 169000 and 226000 years ago

Middle Pleistocene children lived at the Qiusang site, during a glacial period is extraordinary,




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Handprints of Children in Tibet May Not Be the World's Oldest Art
Science News
GOLAHURA
Given that the earliest human presence attributed to the Nwya Devu site
on the Central Tibetan Plateau is from the Late Pleistocene
they used uranium-thorium dating to determine the age of the tracks
and results published three years later showed that the tracks
were made in the Middle Pleistocene
between 169000 and 226000 years ago
Middle Pleistocene children lived at the Qiusang site