Terms & Conditions
<< Previous Page

Access this article (PDF File)


Volume: 80  Number: 308  Page: 390–404

Sexual dimorphism in Upper Palaeolithic hand stencils

Dean R. Snow*

*Department of Anthropology, The Pennsylvania State University, 409 Carpenter Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA (Email: drs17@psu.edu)

Sexual roles in deep prehistory are among the most intriguing puzzles still to solve. Here the author shows how men and women can be distinguished by scientific measurement in the prints and stencils of the human hand that occur widely in Upper Palaeolithic art. Six hand stencils from four French caves are attributed to four adult females, an adult male, and a sub-adult male. Here we take a step closer to showing that both sexes are engaged in cave art and whatever dreams and rituals it implies.

Keywords: France, Upper Palaeolithic, cave art, handprints, gender studies