Caves provide a stable environment with consistent temperature and humidity levels, protecting paintings from extreme fluctuations that can cause deterioration. The darkness of caves shields paintings from light damage, such as fading or color changes. Additionally, caves are usually secluded and provide a natural barrier to protect against vandalism or human interference.
Some of the artifacts discovered in caves include cave paintings, tools like stone axes or arrowheads, pottery, animal bones, and sometimes even human remains. These artifacts help archaeologists understand the lives and cultures of past inhabitants.
From a purely aesthetic view, caves offer a range of physical and mental challenges and often very impressive or beautiful scenery found nowhere else. Scientifically they are fascinating, with studies ranging across geology, hydrology, biology, palaeontology and archaeology. Some of these examine evidence preserved by being underground, leading to assessments of palaeoclimates and climate changes.
The cave drawings tell stories and they could tell how the dinosaurs died. +++ To clarify and qualify. Yes. some caves preserve human art, artefacts and sometimes mortal remains that shed light on the cultures using the caves, but we cannot know what stories the pictures tell beyond an intelligent guess of hunting themes. Also, the sentence is ambiguous by apparently linking the art and the dinosaurs. Not only were these reptiles all dead 65 million years before Man appeared, but there are very few if any known caves at all anywhere near old enough to have any evidence of dinosaurs' lives and deaths at all! To the best of my knowledge there have been few if any dinosaur remains found in caves; and they would have been parts of fossils eroded from their host rocks and washed into the caves in geologically quite recent times. So caves do not shed any palaeontological light on the KT Boundary mass-extinction at all. What caves DO provide is naturally-protected sedimentary and speleothem evidence for past climates, though, and a lot of modern cave research is focussed on this to help us understand climate change.
The presence or otherwise of visible fossils should not alone be the deciding factor. Caves are geological features worthy of respect and preservation just as with nature generally. Fossils exposed in the cave walls equally deserve respect as a feature of their cave; and are exposed by chance allowing us to admire them. Beyond the aesthetics, fossils are often important stratigraphical markers, allowing correlation of rock units over wide areas, and caves are remarkably good natural archives because their interiors are not subject to normal weathering and vegetating. Of the Southern English caves with which I am most familar for example, some hold numerous fragments of crinoids and solitary corals (in Carboniferous Limestone - called I think Pennsylvanian in USA). Others in Jurassic Limestone hold sizeable ammonites, seen in partial exposure or as moulds.
Insights into cultural beliefs and practices: Cave paintings can provide valuable information about the beliefs, customs, and lifestyles of prehistoric societies. Evolution of artistic expression: The study of cave paintings can help trace the development of artistic techniques and styles over time. Environmental conditions and resources: Analysis of cave paintings can offer clues about the environment, resources, and living conditions of ancient peoples.
Some of the artifacts discovered in caves include cave paintings, tools like stone axes or arrowheads, pottery, animal bones, and sometimes even human remains. These artifacts help archaeologists understand the lives and cultures of past inhabitants.
yes because salt is a kind of molecule that would help to preserve the fruit and make it last longer
shelter
To help preserve the bodies, otherwise the budies would desenegrate, which would leave a skeleton.
It was important to have doom paintings if the service was Latin because not many people back then in medieval England knew latin, so paintings would help the congregation understand the message the preist was trying to get across.
There are a few jobs that help Boreal Forest. These jobs would be a cleaner and a teacher.
Manufacturers use nitrogen gas in chip bags to help preserve freshness.
They help to preserve the culture of the society. Without these, the culture would soon be lost in scientific figures.
Stories were shared daily by all members of a tribe on to preserve culrues.
COPPER
Answer
Yes