Investigating ancient human DNA preservation on cave walls and in rock art

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Bossoms Mesa, Alba; Essel, Elena; Jáuregui, Louisa; Galtier, Aurore; Zavala, Elena I.; Nota, Kevin; Szymanski, Merlin; Zorn, Julia; Gomes, Hugo; Nash, George H.; Rosina, Pierluigi; Lattao, Virginia; Oosterbeek, Luiz; Carpetudo, Carlos; Almeida, Nelson A.; de las Heras, Carmen; Fatás, Pilar; Prada, Alfredo; Díaz-González, Lucía M.; Sánchez-Moral, M. Elena; Martínez Villa, Alberto; Menéndez Fernández, Mario; García Arranz, José Julio; von Petzinger, Genevieve; Cantalejo, Pedro; Fernández, Luis-Efrén; Ramos-Muñoz, José; Fernández Sánchez, Diego S.; Mira, Hugo A.; Muñoz Fernández, Emilio; Montes-Barquín, Ramón; Ontañón, Roberto; Kelso, Janet; Prüfer, Kay; Vernot, Benjamin; Hajdinjak, Mateja; Shao, Qingfeng; Garcês, Sara; Collado Giraldo, Hipólito; Meyer, Matthias
Year of Publication: 2026
Journal: Nature Communications
Volume: 17
Issue: 1
Date Published: 2026/06/23
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 2041-1723
Abstract:

Previous efforts to link Palaeolithic cultural records to specific populations through DNA analysis have focused on materials from archaeological floor deposits such as bones, sediments, and artefacts. In this study, we explore whether rock art, a spatially distinct expression of human activity, can also preserve DNA traces from its creators. We analyse DNA preservation in pigment samples collected in and around 24 rock art panels from 11 caves across Spain and Portugal, including simple marks (from nine sites), hand stencils (Maltravieso Cave, Extremadura, Spain), and figurative paintings (Cave of Altamira, Cantabria, Spain). We recover traces of ancient human mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, unaccompanied by faunal DNA, from a pigmented calcite crust at Escoural Cave (Portugal), as well as from an unpigmented cave wall sample from the same site. The absence of faunal DNA in both samples suggests direct DNA deposition through human contact. In contrast, three additional unpigmented samples, from Escoural and Covarón Cave (Asturias, Spain), yielded mixtures of human and faunal DNA, suggesting indirect deposition. Although our results do not conclusively link ancient human DNA preservation to the generation of cave art, we show that traces of human DNA can persist on cave walls for thousands of years.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-74234-2