There is no one definite answer, because ancient cave art was made in quite a number of countries very far apart, at times also far apart, by those of the original inhabitants who used caves as dwellings or as ceremonial sites. Some of the finest paintings are from the Neolithic or earlier people of South-West European regions now in France and Spain; but a stone-circle made from stalagmites and discovered in a French cave fairly recently, has been credited to a Neanderthal society.
Cave drawings.
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The Lascaux caves
Drawings or writings by cave men
yes
The drawings by cave people are called cave paintings or rock art. They were often created using natural pigments and depict various animals, symbols, and everyday activities of prehistoric people. These paintings provide valuable insights into early human culture and spirituality.
Cave drawings.
its art before history. its mostly cave drawings. they started with "cave men".
Cave people created drawings using natural pigments like charcoal, ochre, and hematite, which they mixed with water or animal fat to produce paint. They applied these pigments to cave walls using their fingers, brushes made from animal hair, or by blowing the pigment through hollow bones. Many of their drawings depicted animals, human figures, and symbols, often reflecting their environment and daily life. The drawings were typically created in dark, sheltered areas of caves, which helped preserve them over time.
Spain and France.
a caveman?
Flute like instruments were first seen in early cave drawings but the flute was probably made somewhere in central Asia