Previous Article in Journal
The Contribution of Malacological Studies to Understanding the Occupation Dynamics of the Prehistoric Site at Colombare di Villa-Negrar di Valpolicella (VR): Preliminary Report on the Remains from Trenches 4 and 15
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic Painted Imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales

1
Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, UK
2
Geosciences Centre, Rua Silvio Lima, Polo II, 3030-790 Coimbra, Portugal
3
Instituto Terra e Memória, Largo dos Combatentes, 6120-750 Mação, Portugal
4
Junta de Extremadura, Sección de Arqueología, Avda Valhondo, s/n, Edificio III Milenio, Módulo 4-Planta 2, 06800 Mérida, Spain
5
Tomar Polytechnic University, Estrada da Serra, 2300-313 Tomar, Portugal
6
Museu de Arte Pré-Histórica e do Sagrado do Vale do Tejo, 6120-721 Mação, Portugal
7
Department of Environmental and Prevention Sciences, University of Ferrara, Via Saragat, 1, 44122 Ferrara, Italy
8
Department of Archaeology, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK
9
Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
10
Geochemie und Isotopengeologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttngen, 37073 Göttingen, Germany
11
School of Ocean and Earth Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
12
Department of Geography, Swansea University, Wales SA1 8EN, UK
13
School of Geography, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Quaternary 2026, 9(3), 43; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043
Submission received: 5 March 2026 / Revised: 17 April 2026 / Accepted: 6 May 2026 / Published: 26 May 2026

Abstract

Recent and ongoing fieldwork at Bacon Hole, located on the Gower Peninsula, South Wales, is being conducted by an international team of researchers. This work includes pigment analysis and a chronometric dating programme focused on a vertical painted surface within a side chamber. The painted surface is considered a product of human agency, specifically applied haematite. Originally identified in 1912 by Professor William Sollas and Henri Breuil as Palaeolithic cave art, the painted panel was dismissed by 1928. In September 2022, the painted surface, along with other potential paintings, was rediscovered. In April 2023, the First Art team sampled the pigments for organic residues, while a team from the University of Southampton collected samples from several calcite flows overlying the painted surface for uranium–thorium dating. As a scientific control for the initial dating programme, the First Art team, in collaboration with scientists from Nanjing Normal University, conducted a second round of sample collecting and analysis in May 2024. This paper presents a discussion of the history and archaeological significance of the site, along with the results of the pigment and dating analysis carried out in April 2023 and May 2024.

1. Introduction

Bacon Hole is located within the parish of Pennard at NGR SS 5604 8682 (Figure 1), within the limestone cliffs of south Gower, overlooking the Bristol Channel (Plate 1). The site is included in Heneb’s (formally, the Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust (GGAT)) Historic Environment Record (PRN 00306w). Bacon Hole is not a Scheduled Monument; however, the site is located in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).
Bacon Hole represents a site of considerable archaeological and geomorphological significance. The cave is under the custodianship of the National Trust. Although the cave has not yet been designated a Scheduled Monument, the site’s current protection status reflects both its natural and cultural heritage value.
In 1912, a significant discovery was made in a side chamber situated east of the cave’s main gallery: a painted panel comprising a series of eleven horizontal lines. This artwork, referred to as rock art in the absence of a more precise term, was initially interpreted as the first known example of [Upper] Palaeolithic rock art in the British Isles. However, by 1928, the authenticity and significance of the markings were largely dismissed. This scepticism may have stemmed from the panel being obscured by flowstone deposits, which cover much of the chamber wall and rendered the art difficult to access or study. The panel remained largely forgotten until its rediscovery in September 2022. Upon confirmation of its re-emergence, the National Trust and the Welsh Heritage Agency Cadw were promptly notified. Recognizing the potential importance of the find, both the owner, the National Trust, and the Bradshaw Foundation awarded funding to support scientific investigation of the panel. The main objectives were to identify the composition of the pigments used and to attempt chronological dating of the artwork.
The cave has a long archaeological history and contains one of the most complex palaeoenvironmental sequences recorded in the western British Isles [1,2]. Bacon Hole lies close to several cave sites that have yielded Upper Palaeolithic archaeology and palaeoenvironmental evidence, including Goat Hole (Paviland) and neighbouring Minchin Hole. In terms of archaeological and palaeoenvironmental research on Bacon Hole, the first investigations began in 1850 by Col. E.R. Wood who excavated somewhere within the main gallery and discovered Pleistocene deposits, including faunal remains. Wood did not publish anything pertaining to Bacon Hole, but his notes were transcribed and reported by Benson [3], Falconer [4] and Garrod [5]. The site was later investigated by Rutter and Mason between 1948 and 1956. It was from this excavation programme where much of the later prehistoric and historic material was uncovered. In recent times, the cave was excavated using modern archaeological techniques, first by a team from the Natural History Museum, directed by Stringer during the early to mid-1970s [6,7], followed by Bowen during the early 1980s [8], exposing a complex stratigraphy. In 2017, the National Trust commissioned GGAT to undertake an archaeological investigation within a small opening where several shells were recovered but no cultural artefacts identified [9]. Up until late September 2025, there was full access to the cave, including the side chamber where the painted panel is located. However, the side chamber is now protected by a steel grille that extends across its entrance, protecting both the fragile archaeology and the rare bat populations that roost in this part of the cave between September and April each year.
Rock art of the Upper Palaeolithic, along with mobiliary art, is a rare occurrence in the British Isles. The first significant dated discovery occurring in Church Hole Cave, Creswell Crags (Nottinghamshire), in 2003 revealed a small assemblage of engraved animal figures that possessed a minimum date range between 13 and 11.8 ka [10]. Later, in 2010, an engraved cervid was discovered inside Cathole Cave (Parkmill), located 4.1 km to the NW of Bacon Hole, and was successfully dated with a minimum date range of between 14.5 and 12.5 ka [11,12]. Both cave sites were located several kilometres south of the Devensian ice sheet.
The First Art Team, based at the Geosciences Centre in Portugal, and a dating team from the University of Southampton were commissioned by the landowners, the National Trust, to undertake a fieldwork and sampling programme within Bacon Hole. The fieldwork methodology and results were reported in July 2023 [13]. As of May 2024, further sampling of the panel has been undertaken, along with a strategy to protect the side gallery with the construction of a steel grille [14].
  • Archaeological and Quaternary History of Bacon Hole
Over the past 220 years, Bacon Hole has been the focus of several excavations, sedimentological and palaeontological studies and a discovery and rediscovery of potential LUP rock art. Bacon Hole has a large SW-facing entrance, 18 m wide, 6 m high and around 9 m above the high-water mark [15]. The entrance has, over the millennia, retreated to its current position due to weathering and erosional processes, ranging from freeze–thaw in cold (peri-)glacial conditions to the dissolution of the limestone geology and sea inundation in warmer and wetter interglacial conditions (Figure 2 and Figure 3).
The name of Bacon Hole apparently derives from a feature on a large stalagmite within the rear section of the main gallery much resembling rashers of bacon (as described by Oldisworth [16]). Since initial scientific interest, the cave has witnessed numerous investigations, revealing a complex sequence of Pleistocene and Holocene stratigraphy, including an assemblage of extinct fauna (now housed at the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff). Later archaeological material indicates a Roman, early medieval, and late medieval presence.
  • Geomorphological record
The cave can be divided into two areas: the principal gallery (with its associated entrance) and a smaller eastern side chamber. The principal gallery extends c. 56 m deep into the cliff face. The side chamber leads off to the NE side of the principal gallery and measures c. 3 m wide by 5.15 m in length at its entrance] and c. 7.5 m long. A small niche at the end of this side chamber extends a further c. 1 m, with its surfaces covered with a deep red haematite secretion.
The cave overlooks the Bristol Channel to the south and southeast (and has been done since around 8.5 ka BP). The size and extent of the original pre-glacial entrance are unknown. Based on the remnants of an extensive rockfall south of the current entrance, it is probable that the cave may have extended at least a further 30–50 m to the south. Currently, the cave entrance stands at c. 40 m from the high-water mark. To the east of the cave are the remnants of an interglacial raised beach (known as the Patella beach, and which has been dated to the Ipswichian or Marine Isotope Stage 5e, while to the west is Minchin Hole (NGR SS 5553 8688), another famous Gower cave. Access to the Bacon Hole cave is rather precarious and is via an E-W footpath that is approached from East Cliff Lane. The footpath extends over the top of the entrance, with a sharp incline to the west. Access to the entrance is via a climb past an extensive breccia deposit covering much of the entrance area and directly underneath a former calcite floor deposit (Figure 4).
The principal gallery has an inverted V-shaped roof that extends to the various current floor levels. Both areas of the cave reveal evidence of relatively recent disturbance, probably the result of archaeological activity, in particular within the rear section of the principal gallery. A substantial cave earth deposit, plus penetrating light from the entrance, has encouraged vegetation to cross much of the surface of the principal gallery. However, no vegetation is present within the side chamber; instead, the floor is covered by frost-shattered stone. In both chambers, speleothems from both the ceiling and floor surfaces are active.
The cave was first investigated in 1850 by Colonel Wood. Later in 1913, W.L. Morgan provided a detailed account of both the art and its geological context, along with the first photographic image of the painted panel [17]. Later, in 1943, Allen and Rutter, and later still, between 1974 and 1984, Currant, Stringer and Collcutt undertook substantial investigations [18].
The various excavations revealed a well-stratified sequence of cave deposits containing a wealth of Pleistocene faunal remains. The cave stratigraphy has been interpreted as representing successive marine and terrestrial episodes reflecting the large swings in sea levels associated with the transition from the last interglacial period (Ipswichian), when the sea level was several metres higher than today, to the last glacial period (Devensian), when during its maximum extent, the southern limit of the British ice sheet ran across Gower and the Bristol Channel was dry land (see e.g., [19,20]). Stringer et al. [2] correlated a sandy “breccio-conglomerate”, tentatively interpreted as a storm beach deposit, with the Patella beach, which thus provides a reliable stratigraphic marker. Its faunal assemblage (e.g., wood mouse, red deer) and independent dating confirm full interglacial conditions at the time of deposition (Ipswichian, OIS 5e, c. 122 ka BP) [2]. The basal sandy units underlying this storm beach contain marine sands and molluscs and are thought to represent the onset of interglacial conditions, whereas higher up in the sequence, clayey, silty and sandy deposits with a faunal assemblage (e.g., wolf, spotted hyena and straight-tusked elephant) would be indicative of a cooler and dryer climate. This is thought to reflect a gradual change to more terrestrial conditions and falling sea levels. U-series dating suggests deposition of these upper layers occurred around 80–90 ka BP [21]. The youngest date obtained from a cemented breccia, interpreted as scree, and containing cold climate species such as reindeer and wolverine, is c. 13 ka BP, i.e., Late Devensian in age.
  • Archaeological history
Based on successive archaeological investigations at Bacon Hole, the limited material evidence recovered from the cave suggests a broad chronological span. Polished ivory objects, identified by Griffiths [22], have been attributed to the Upper Palaeolithic; however, this interpretation has been challenged by Currant [1]. Additionally, during 19th-century excavations (including those conducted by Colonel Wood), Iron Age potsherds were uncovered, with a radiocarbon date of approximately 300 BCE. Later discoveries include a Roman cooking potsherd, a Romano-British bone pin, a bronze brooch of Irish origin dating to the 7th century, several Saxon-style beads, a medieval cooking potsherd, and a bone flute that may date to the late Norman period. These findings suggest episodic short-term domestic occupation or visitation to the cave during later prehistory and into the early historic period [23,24,25]. However, to date, no Upper Palaeolithic lithics have been recovered.
  • A controversial discovery and rediscovery of Late Upper Palaeolithic rock art
The discovery of Upper Palaeolithic rock art was made by Professor William Sollas and Henri Breuil in 1912 (Figure 5). The discovery included a series of ten or more horizontal bands that were made by red pigment. This panel was located on the rear eastern wall of the side chamber. However, this discovery was later considered to be a natural phenomenon and was dismissed by 1928. Indeed, Wheeler [26] and later Rutter [25] considered those horizontal bands as natural. Rutter stated that “Gower’s claim to the only British mural cave-art cannot be substantiated” [25].
As far as the First Art team is aware, Breuil and Sollas did not produce an accurate plan detailing the specific location of the rock art. Nevertheless, their discovery garnered significant national and international attention, as reported by outlets such as the Manchester Guardian and The New York Times. In 1913, W.L. Morgan published a largely supportive discussion of the Breuil and Sollas panel, which included the first photographic evidence—a close-up monochrome image depicting the painted bands [17] (Figure 6).
Morgan [17] noted that the floor of the side chamber had been excavated in 1850, probably by Col. E. Woods and again in 1858. Neither excavation had identified the painted imagery. According to Sollas [27], the panel consisted of a series of ten horizontal lines, although much of it was obscured by a white, opaque calcite flowstone that covered much of the chamber wall. At the time of discovery, the full extent of the painted imagery, including that concealed beneath the calcite flowstone, was not fully understood. In addition to the calcite covering, the walls of the side chamber were, at the time of discovery, heavily graffitied.
Surviving graffiti within the cave includes both historic textual and pictorial elements, notably including the artistic work of Jonny Bates, a local fisherman from nearby Oystermouth. In 1894, Bates painted images on the western wall of the chamber and a figure near the eastern side, close to the side chamber entrance. Additionally, personal textual graffiti, written in graphite pencil, is dispersed across much of the chamber’s walls, revealing names and dates. It is possible that some of the painted graffiti, including that of Jonny Bates from 1894, may obscure earlier historic and prehistoric painted imagery (Figure 7).
As a result of the initial survey in August 2022, several potential areas within both chambers were identified for potential ancient painted imagery. Of particular interest was the Breuil and Sollas panel. The rediscovery was made by colleague Dr. Barbara Oosterwijk (University of Exeter) during our initial visit. As well as the Breuil and Sollas panel, there were other haematite markings, the probable result of human agency, including lines, geometric forms, finger dots and spreads of pigment, the result of projected spitting or blowing paint onto the chamber wall. It was within this area of the cave where the First Art team took samples for ATR-FTIR spectroscopy and Micro-Raman (m-Raman) spectroscopy, the results of which are presented below. The University of Southampton dating team took several samples of calcite covering the horizontal lines that occupy the lower part of the panel. This sampling strategy was later repeated in March 2024 when the First Art team sampled other areas of the painted panel. The samples were later analysed and dated by colleagues from Nanjing Normal University, China. The initial photographic survey, undertaken by the authors, used a desk-based colour filter algorithm called Decorrelation-Stretch (shortened to D-Stretch) [28]. To make sense of this unique assemblage, all visible paint in both chambers was photographed. Using a variety of photographic techniques, including high-resolution digital photography and D-Stretch, the team identified potential hidden haematite spreads that had hitherto passed undiscovered during previous investigations (Figure 8 and Figure 9).

2. Materials and Methods

Following the rediscovery of the painted panel in 2022, the First Art team, in collaboration with dating specialists from the University of Southampton, conducted two expeditions to Bacon Hole in 2023 and 2024. Both visits were commissioned by the National Trust and scheduled outside the bat hibernation season (October to April). The primary aim of these site visits was to create a photographic record of the wall sections within the eastern side chamber, focusing particularly on the area surrounding the painted panel. Historic paintings and textual graffiti in the chamber were also documented photographically. In addition to the photographic survey, the painted surfaces originally discovered by Breuil and Sollas in 1912 were sampled to establish potential minimum and maximum date ranges. A total of twelve samples (six from each expedition) were collected. These included samples for both dating purposes (calcite overlapping pigments) and pigment geochemical analysis (Figure 10). The latter aimed to identify potential organic and inorganic binders using Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy and Micro-Raman (µ-Raman) analysis.
  • Photogrammetric techniques
Prior to the sampling programme in April 2023, and later, in May 2024, the walls of the side chamber were recorded photographically, along with a photographic essay of the sampling programme. The photographic survey employed a camera system that contained an inbuilt D-Stretch programme that could convert RGB imagery into files that were sensitive to certain colours, in particular, red and its hues, shades and tints.
  • Uranium–Thorium dating (U-Th) methodology
Uranium–thorium dating (U-Th) is an absolute dating method that measures the ratio of uranium and thorium isotopes, in this case in calcite crust samples, to determine the minimum age ranges for directly associated anthropogenic pigments. As mentioned earlier, twelve samples (six samples from each of two visits) were taken from calcite that covered the painted sections of the panel. Two sampling campaigns were made in Bacon Hole cave (one in 2023 and the second in 2024). The first one was conducted in 2023, during which AWGP and CS undertook sampling of carbonate crusts. The sampling methodology is outlined in detail in Hoffmann et al. [29].
In terms of the applied haematite spreads in the side chamber, selected areas where carbonate formation directly overlay pigment were identified. The surface was then cleaned by scraping with a scalpel. Further carbonate scrapings were then collected in a pre-cleaned sample tube. Once a few milligrams of carbonate had been collected, a second tube was used to collect the next aliquot, and so on, to provide a sequence of subsamples that progressed deeper into the carbonate stratigraphy. Photographs were taken for each subsample, and the area was inspected to identify the presence of pigment below. The sampling of carbonate ceased before reaching the upper surface of a pigment layer. Samples (Table 1) were submitted for analysis to the Department of Geochemistry and Isotope Geology at Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany.
To ensure high-quality control in U-Th dating of the carbonate samples, specifically their relevance to the age of painted areas, a clear stratigraphic relationship with the pigment layer was established. This involved confirming that each sample was entirely above or below the pigment. Sample locations were carefully examined and documented in the field to verify this relationship. Any sample with uncertain stratigraphy (e.g., U-Th BH 1) was excluded. Additionally, all sample powders were screened under a microscope for traces of pigment. The presence of pigment indicates a compromised stratigraphic relationship, suggesting the sample may include a mix of younger carbonate from above and older carbonate from below the pigment. Such samples were also discarded; for instance, sample U-Th BH 6 was rejected on this basis. U-Th dates on carbonates (e.g., calcite) are only reliable if the system has remained closed, that is, there has been no loss or gain of uranium since initial carbonate precipitation, which would give inaccurately older or younger dates. This can occur if there is in situ dissolution and reprecipitation of the carbonate. While this phenomenon seems relatively rare, it has been observed (e.g., [30] and is characterized by sequential samples giving U-Th dates out of their stratigraphic order. For this reason, where possible, we attempt to take multiple subsamples, broadly along the growth axis of the carbonate crust, and reject dates that fall out of stratigraphic order. Other issues of quality control (e.g., correction for detrital contamination) are detailed in Hoffmann et al. [31].
A second campaign was authorized in 2024. This sampling was carried out by the First Art team, and the lab work was carried out at Nanjing Normal University in China. In order to constrain the minimum age of the cave art, two secondary carbonate samples (CBH-24-01 and CBH-24-04) were directly superimposed over several surfaces where clear paintings were identified. The samples were collected using a very fine chisel to carefully cut out tiny, cauliflower-shaped pieces of calcite for U-series dating. The stratigraphic relationship with the pigment was confirmed by the associated pigment on the cutting surfaces. No damage was made to the art (see Supplementary Materials). The two samples measured ~5 mm in diameter, and both had a light coloration and a globular [botryoidal] morphology. The detrital contaminations were visible on the surfaces. Given the small quantity and the impurity, high-resolution in situ laser ablation (LA) U-series dating was performed on the two samples.
The LA system (RESOlution-LR, Applied Spectra, USA) used operates on a Coherent COMPex Pro102 ArF excimer laser source (Coherent, Germany) operating at a wavelength of 193 nm and equipped with an S155 large-format sample pool. For determining a U-series age, a pair of closely spaced spots (measuring ~40 microns apart) were ablated, with one spot for measuring the isotopic ratio of 234U/238U and another for 230Th/238U. The isotope of 232Th, seen as a proxy of detrital contamination, was monitored simultaneously during the 234U/238U measurement. The spots were ablated with a 380 μm spot size, a 10 Hz pulse repetition and 5 J/cm2 energy fluence. The aerosols generated by the laser ablation process were transported by a mixture of Ar (0.7 L/min) and He (0.8 L/min) gases to the high-temperature ICP (inductively coupled plasma, ~6000 K) for ionization, which were subsequently extracted for isotope analyses using a MC-ICPMS (multiple-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer). The isotopes of 230Th and 234U were measured on an SEM (secondary electron multiplier), and the isotopes of 232Th, 235U and 238U were measured in Faraday cups. The signals measured 60 s before starting ablation were used as the gas blank. A standard-sample bracketing (SSB) approach was used to obtain the data correction factors (e.g., mass bias, SEM yield, and elemental fractionation). The used carbonate standard (RM-C1), prepared from a stalagmite, has an average 238U concentration of 17.3 ± 1.0 μg/g, a 232Th concentration < 5 ng/g, a 234U/238U activity ratio of 1.0116 ± 0.0006, and a 230Th/238U activity ratio of 0.9525 ± 0.0013, determined by isotope-dilution U-series analyses via MC-ICPMS [32]. A slice of the stalagmite Wu87 recorded the D/O 19 climate-change event with a known age of ~70 ka and was used as a secondary standard to monitor accuracy [32]. The measured atom ratios of 232Th/238U, 234U/238U and 230Th/238U were corrected by the SSB method and filtered by boxplot analysis to exclude outliers. The derived mean and standard error of these ratios were used for U-series age calculations by Monte Carlo simulations [33], using half-lives of 75,584 years for 230Th [34], 245,620 years for 234U [34], 1.4 × 1010 years for 232Th [35] and 4.47 × 109 years for 238U [36].
  • The pigment sampling strategy
The sampling process was undertaken in 2024 and included the removal of nine samples (samples CBH-01 to CBH-09). Five samples were collected from the panel with paintings, one sample from a nearby natural iron-oxide deposit vein and three samples regarding the cave rock support (see the Supplementary Materials). The samples sourced from Bacon Hole cave underwent analysis utilizing Attenuated Total Reflection-Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy and Micro-Raman (µ-Raman) spectroscopy.
Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy is an analytical technique that uses infrared light to identify the chemical composition and molecular structure of materials. It measures the material’s unique absorption and emission spectra, capturing specific wavelengths that correspond to distinct molecular bonds. These spectral signatures allow for the identification of both organic and inorganic compounds.
For ATR-FTIR, a Bruker Alpha FT-IR instrument with Opus 7.5 software was employed for data collection. The spectrometer utilized an Attenuated Total Reflection (ATR) sampling device, featuring a global source with a KBr beam splitter and a Deuterated Lanthanum-doped Triglycine Sulphate detector and was used at room temperature. The ATR sampling device incorporated a diamond internal reflection element (IRE) in a single-reflection configuration. Spectra were recorded within the spectral range of 400–4000 cm−1 at a resolution of 4 cm−1, with 24 scans per sample. Due to the minute sample sizes, microstratigraphic studies were not feasible.
Micro-Raman (µ-Raman) spectroscopy was utilized to identify the raw material used in the preparation of the pigment. The µ-Raman spectroscopic analysis was conducted using a LabRam HR800 spectrometer (Horiba Group, Oberursel, Taunus, Germany) with an 800 mm focal length, coupled with an Olympus BXFM optical microscope and equipped with a digital camera. The spectrometer featured an air-cooled CCD detector (1024 × 256 pixels) set at 70 °C, utilizing 600 and 1800 grooves/mm gratings. The excitation source was a He-Ne laser emitting at 632.8 nm, with a maximum laser power of 17 mW, focused on the sample using ND filters. Raman spectra were recorded within the range of 100–1800 cm−1. Exposure time, beam power, and accumulations were optimized for each sample to obtain informative spectra while minimizing any potential alteration of the sample. The wavelength scale was calibrated using a silicon standard (520.5 cm−1), and the acquired spectra were processed using LabSpec 6 software and compared with the BioRad spectral database using “KnowItAll” spectroscopy software.

3. Results

The U-Th results from the first sampling campaign (2023) (Table 2) and from the second sampling campaign (2024) (Table 3) in Bacon Hole cave are presented below.

3.1. The First Sampling Campaign in Bacon Hole (2023)

Most samples from 2023 can be characterized by their high degree of detrital contamination (i.e., low 230Th/232Th activity). The detrital contamination makes the detrital-corrected ages significantly younger and increases their uncertainty.
Most results are consistent with carbonate formation within about the last 2500 years. While the sequential sample pairs for U-Th BH 2 and 3 can be placed (within error) in stratigraphic order, the large errors on the ages mask the utility of this method of quality control. The exception to the general pattern of young ages is U-Th BH 4b, which gives a corrected age of 17.0 ± 1.3 ka. It differs from the other samples in having lower 234U/238U and U concentration and higher 230Th/232Th. The latter is significant, as it suggests the sample represents an earlier phase of speleothem growth, rather than the younger phase represented by U-Th BH 4a that has subsequently lost uranium (i.e., the loss of uranium would not disturb the 230Th/232Th activity). Cautiously, therefore (see Section 4 below), this result gives a minimum age for the painting of 15.7 ka.

3.2. The Second Sampling Campaign in Bacon Hole (2024)

In the second sampling campaign in Bacon Hole, two pairs of spot analyses were performed on the sample CBH-24-01 and three pairs of spot analyses were formed on the sample CBH-24-04 (check Supplementary Materials and Table 3).
For sample CBH-24-01, the measured 238U ion beam intensity was approximately 0.16 V, corresponding to a U concentration of ~1.5 ppm; however, the 230Th ion beam was only ~7.5 cps, indicating a young age and resulting in a relatively high uncertainty (8–10%, 2σ) in the 230Th/238U ratio. Throughout the ablation process, both the 234U/238U and 230Th/238U ratios remained relatively stable. The 234U/238U activity ratios from the two analyses are in good agreement, with an average value of ~1.52. However, the corresponding 230Th/238U activity ratios (~0.041 and ~0.053) differ beyond the analytical uncertainties. The derived uncorrected U-series ages are 2.9 ± 0.3 ka and 3.8 ± 0.3 ka, respectively. After correcting for detrital 230Th contamination using the bulk earth value of 0.8 ± 0.4, the corrected ages are 2.3 ± 0.4 and 3.5 ± 0.3 ka BP. These results suggest a minimum age of ~3.2 ka BP for the associated rock painting.
For sample CBH-24-04, the measured 238U ion beam intensity was approximately 0.15 V, with a corresponding 230Th beam intensity of ~7.1 cps. The 234U/238U and 230Th/238U ratios were relatively stable during the ablation process. The three analyses yielded consistent 234U/238U activity ratios, averaging ~1.97. In contrast, the 230Th/238U activity ratios exhibited some variability, ranging from ~0.04 to 0.06. This variation resulted in uncorrected U-series ages spanning from ~2.3 to 3.4 ka. After applying a correction for detrital 230Th contamination, the ages were refined to a range of ~1.9 to 3.0 ka, suggesting a minimum age of ~2.7 ka BP for the associated rock painting.

3.3. Results of the Pigment Sampling

The FTIR spectra of the samples revealed characteristic peaks for calcite at 710, 870, 1398, and 1795 cm−1, along with a haematite doublet at 465 and 525 cm−1. Peaks associated with red earth, indicating the presence of aluminosilicates, appeared in the 1030–1090 cm−1 range. Additional peaks observed between 2000 and 3000 cm−1 are attributed to various carbonyl compounds, likely resulting from lichen activity. A signal between 3250 and 3290 cm−1, commonly found in pigment spectra, corresponds to the O–H stretching vibration of hydrogen-bonded hydroxyl groups [37,38] (Table 4).
Raman spectra undertaken on the samples show the typical peaks of haematite at 222, 289, 406, 607, 658, and 1313 cm−1 [39]. The characteristics of the strong peak of calcite appear at around 1086 cm−1. Note that aluminosilicates are not identified because of instrumental features.

4. Discussion

Regarding the first campaign results in 2023, the calcite crusts available for sampling were typically very thin. This resulted in very small samples (<1 mg). The analytical uncertainties produced by small samples prevent us from giving a precise age for the younger phase of speleothem formation. The mean age (±1 s.e.) of the subsamples of U-Th BH 2 and BH 3 is 1.66 ± 0.46 ka. If we assume these samples represent a single phase of carbonate formation, it follows that this occurred within the last 2570 years (at 95% confidence). If we look at the range of individual dates for the four subsamples and consider the youngest ages of 0.96 ± 1.84 ka BP and 1.16 ± 0.74 ka BP, we can tentatively suggest that both may represent formation prior to the earliest recognized onset of the Little Ice Age in Europe [40,41]. In fact, these dates would both be compatible with the timings of the relatively warm and wet period known as the Medieval Climate Anomaly [42]. The older dates in the range (1.51 ± 0.61 ka BP and 2.99 ± 0.81 ka BP) fall within a period that—in Europe—would normally be characterized as relatively warm and dry [43], with the younger of the two dates tentatively falling into the period known as the Roman Warm Period [42,44]. In any case, it would not be unexpected that speleothems formed during any of these warmer periods.
Sample U-Th BH 4 is notably different. While subsample U-Th BH 4a shows results similar to U-Th BH 2 and BH 3, subsample U-Th BH 4b gives a significantly older age of 17.0 ± 1.3 ka. Interestingly, this agrees with a date of 13.0 ± 3.0 ka from a stalagmite floor capping the deposits in the platform at the present entrance to Bacon Hole [2], making our result consistent with an apparent period of speleothem formation elsewhere in the cave. Taking the oldest date of c. 17 ka BP at face value, this speleothem would have formed at a time when Britain was out of the last glacial period, during which—at its maximum—an ice sheet would have covered part of the Gower peninsula [19,20]. The climate at the time was recovering, and it is believed that speleothems may have started to form under certain conditions. Panitz et al. [45] have suggested that the peak of speleothem growth in the post-LGM British Isles occurred just after the Younger Dryas Stadial, at c. 10 ka BP. In this context, the 17.1 and 13.0 ka Bacon Hole ages are relatively early in the deglaciation phase; however, growth in southern Britain may have started a bit earlier than elsewhere given that the ice sheet had “retreated” over a significant distance and that the area had been ice-free since at least 22 ka BP [46].
On the face of it, the age of U-Th BH 4b represents a minimum age for the painting of 15.7 ka (at 95% confidence). However, we must maintain caution when accepting this date, which is currently based on a single analysis. While the ages of subsamples BH 4a and BH 4b clearly fall in stratigraphic order, we would ideally require at least three subsamples. Where it is not possible to take more than two subsamples, dates from different locations on a motif that are in agreement could serve to provide further confidence in the dating results (e.g., [47]. At present our results meet either of these criteria and should therefore be treated as preliminary. Both the 3.2 and the 2.7 ka BP dates, obtained by the second campaign via in situ LA U-series analyses, are in the same range as the U-Th BH 3a and U-Th BH 4a dates discussed above. All would fall in the Late Bronze Age, a period which was relatively warm [48] and which, in Britain, is also known to have seen a significant, sudden change to wetter climates around 800 yr BCE [49,50]. Again, this could conceivably have led to a period of speleothem formation, which may support the interpretation of our initial dating. Analytical results for Bacon Hole pigments indicate that the substrate comprises mainly calcite (in the form of a limestone). The samples also revealed traces of clay and lichen activity. The analysed pigment constituent (forming the painted panel) is predominantly haematite, along with a varying quantity of aluminosilicate residues. The observed subtle variations suggest the utilization of at least two distinct recipes in creating the red hues within the applied haematite. Moreover, it is worth emphasizing that the composition of the floor and the rear section of the side chamber may have been the source of the raw materials present within the pigments.
The original panel consists of a series of parallel horizontal lines. This type of spatial arrangement (rhythm and parallelism) is a classic indicator of human symbolic behaviour and has no equivalent in natural mineral precipitation processes. In addition to the lines, finger dots and splashes of pigment were identified, suggesting the use of the spitting or blowing technique. These techniques leave patterns of dispersion (pigment mist) that are morphologically distinct from the natural runoff of iron oxides.
ATR-FTIR and Micro-Raman analyses confirmed that the pigment is applied haematite. If the material were a natural secretion of the rock (autochthonous), the haematite would be present diffusely or following geological veins. Instead, it is confined to the areas of the paintings.
The pigment is sealed beneath layers of calcite flowstone. During sampling for U-Th dating, the removal of the surface layers of calcite revealed the pigment beneath, confirming that the “paint” was applied to a clean rock surface before being covered by subsequent geological processes.

5. Conclusions

In 1912, a painted panel comprising a series of at least ten horizontal lines was discovered. This painted imagery was initially interpreted as the first known example of Upper Palaeolithic rock art in the British Isles. However, by 1928, the painted lines had been largely dismissed, possibly due to the panel being obscured by opaque flowstone deposits, which cover much of the chamber wall. The panel remained largely forgotten until its rediscovery in September 2022.
If the dating sequence is accurate, around 17.1 ka Wales was emerging from a severe cold phase of the Devensian glaciation. During this period, the climate was gradually shifting from a near-uninhabitable frozen landscape to a treeless periglacial environment with sparse vegetation. The area now occupied by the Bristol Channel, where Bacon Hole lies along the northern shoreline, would likely have served as a favourable catchment for migratory megafauna grazing during the summer months. At the same time, Bacon Hole and other caves along what is now the southern coastline of the Gower Peninsula would have offered suitable habitation sites for hunter–fisher–gatherer groups, although no evidence of occupation has yet been identified in or around the cave. Although evidence for Late Upper Palaeolithic habitation is absent from Bacon Hole, the artistic endeavour is present, occupying a discrete area of the rear section of the cave.
Based on the evidence gathered from the two fieldwork visits, we concur with the original interpretation proposed by Breuil and Sollas in 1912 and subsequently discussed by Morgan [17], that the horizontal lines (or streaks) represent anthropogenic activity. The painted lines are arranged horizontally and are equidistant from one another, indicating a deliberate and structured pattern. Furthermore, the haematite used to produce the ten lines likely derives from a single source, probably located at the rear of the side chamber. We also observe that no comparable block patterning occurs on the eastern wall or elsewhere within the side chamber or the main gallery.
The aims and main objectives by the team were to identify the composition of the pigments, to attempt chronological dating of the artwork and to determine if they were anthropogenic.
Archaeometric analysis of sampling from both visits indicates that the wall substrate primarily consists of calcite, consistent with the limestone geology of the region. Additional microscopic analysis revealed the presence of clay particles and evidence of lichen activity on the surface. Crucially, the pigments used in the painted lines were found to be haematite-rich, with variable amounts of clay residues incorporated into the pigment recipe. Based on both field observations by the First Art team and laboratory examination of the pigment samples, it is evident that the pigmented lines were intentionally created by human agency, rather than resulting from natural processes.
In terms of the dating programme, the teams from the University of Southampton and First Art/Nanjing Normal University successfully extracted samples from the panel and duly provided reliable date ranges. It is hoped that in the near future, further sampling may reveal a similar dating sequence to the sampling programmes made in 2023 and 2024. The dating using D-Stretch, along with pigment analysis and the photogrammetric survey, will reveal further evidence of anthropogenic activity. It should be noted that other sections within the side chamber and main gallery require further study as well.
As a result, the rediscovery of painted imagery in Bacon Hole further underscores the panel’s importance as an authentic example of early symbolic behaviour in the Upper Palaeolithic of the British Isles.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/quat9030043/s1.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, G.H.N. and S.G.; methodology, H.C., S.G., H.G., V.L., P.R., E.M., N.E., A.W.G.P., D.L.H., C.D.S., J.F.H. and Q.S.; formal analysis, G.H.N., S.G.; H.C. and B.O.; writing—original draft preparation, G.H.N., S.G., V.L. and P.R.; writing—review and editing, G.H.N., S.G., B.O., Q.S., H.C. and J.F.H.; project administration, G.H.N.; funding acquisition, G.H.N. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Trust, grant number NT S10044021, and the Bradshaw Foundation, grant number BF2024.0001R.

Data Availability Statement

The original contributions presented in this study are included in the article/Supplementary Materials. Further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author the repositories used to provide necessary baseline information.

Acknowledgments

George Nash, Hipólito Collado, Hugo Gomes, Sara Garcês, Virginia Lattao and Pierluigi Rosina are supported by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P. (Portugal) in the frame of UID/00073/2025, UID/PRR/00073/2025 and UID/PRR2/00073/2025 projects of the R&D unit of the Geosciences Center (University of Coimbra, Portugal). The authors would also like to thank David Thomas from the National Trust for his help and support during fieldwork operations. We also thank Peter Robinson from the Bradshaw Foundation and the National Trust for financial and organizational support. The authors have reviewed and edited the output and take full responsibility for the content of this publication.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

  1. Current, A. A formal mammalian biostratigraphy for the Late Pleistocene in Britain. Quat. Sci. Rev. 2001, 20, 1707–1718. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Stringer, C.B.; Currant, A.P.; Schwarcz, H.P.; Collcutt, S.N. Age of Pleistocene faunas from Bacon Hole, Wales. Nature 1986, 320, 59–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Benson, S. An account of the cave deposit at Bacon Hole. In Annual Report of the Swansea Literary and Scientific Society; Swansea Literary and Scientific Society: Swansea, UK, 1851; Volume 1982, pp. 10–19. [Google Scholar]
  4. Falconer, H. London (Gower Caves). In Palaeontological Memoirs and Notes; Robert Hardwicke: London, UK, 1868; Volume II. [Google Scholar]
  5. Garrod, D. The Upper Palaeolithic of the British Isles, 1st ed.; Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK, 1926. [Google Scholar]
  6. Stringer, C.B. A preliminary report on new excavations at Bacon Hole Cave. J. Gower Soc. 1975, 26, 32–37. [Google Scholar]
  7. Stringer, C.B. Evidence of climatic change and human occupation during the last interglacial at Bacon Hole Cave, Gower. J. Gower Soc. 1977, 28, 36–44. [Google Scholar]
  8. Bowen, D.Q.; Andrews, J.T.; Davies, K.H.; Henry, A. Bacon Hole Cave amino acid ratios. In Wales: Gower Preseli Fforest Fawr; Bowen, D.Q., Henry, A., Eds.; Quaternary Research Association Field Guide; Quaternary Research Association: Cambridge, UK, 1984; p. 46. [Google Scholar]
  9. Tuck, M. Bacon Hole Cave Pennard Gower: Assessment of Cave Disturbance and Archaeological Field Evaluation; Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust: Port Talbot, UK, 2017. [Google Scholar]
  10. Pike, A.W.G.; Gilmour, M.; Pettitt, P. Verification of the age of the Palaeolithic cave art at Creswell Crags using Uranium-series disequilibrium dating. In Britain’s Oldest Art: The Ice Age Cave Art of Creswell Crags; Bahn, A., Pettitt, P., Eds.; English Heritage: London, UK, 2009; pp. 87–95. [Google Scholar]
  11. Nash, G.H.; van Calsteren, P.; Simms, M.T.L. A discovery of possible Upper Palaeolithic parietal art in Cathole Cave, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Proc. Univ. Bristol Speleol. Soc. 2012, 25, 327–336. [Google Scholar]
  12. Nash, G.H.; Beardsley, A. The Survey of Cathole Cave, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Proc. Univ. Bristol Speleol. Soc. 2012, 26, 73–83. [Google Scholar]
  13. Pike, A.W.G.; Hoffmann, D.L.; Standish, C.D. 2024. Report on the U-Th Dating of Carbonate Crusts Associated with Parietal Pigments in Bacon Hole, Gower, Wales; National Trust: Carmarthenshire, UK, 2023. [Google Scholar]
  14. Nash, G.H.; Gomes, H.; Collado, H.; Lattao, V.; Rosina, P.; Garcês, S.; Oosterwijk, B.; Pike, A. Bacon Hole Cave Sampling Report: First-Art Project; National Trust: Carmarthenshire, UK, 2024. [Google Scholar]
  15. RCAHM. An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Glamorgan Volume I: Pre-Norman Part I The Stone and Bronze Ages; HMSO: Cardiff, UK, 1976; pp. 18–19. [Google Scholar]
  16. Oldisworth, J. The Swansea Guide: Containing Such Information as Was Deemed Useful to the Traveller Through the Counties of Glamorgan and Monmouth; Z.B. Morris: Swansea, UK, 1802. [Google Scholar]
  17. Morgan, W.L. Bacon Hole, Gower. Archaeol. Cambrenesis 1913, 13, 173–180. [Google Scholar]
  18. Currant, A.P.; Stringer, C.B.; Collcutt, S.N. Bacon Hole Cave. In Wales: Gower Preseli Fforest Fawr; Bowen, D.Q., Henry, A., Eds.; Quaternary Research Association: Cambridge, UK, 1984; pp. 38–44. [Google Scholar]
  19. Hiemstra, J.F.; Rijsdijk, K.F.; Shakesby, R.A.; McCarroll, D. Reinterpreting Rotherslade: Implications for Last Glacial ice limits and Quaternary stratigraphy of the British Isles. J. Quat. Sci. 2009, 24, 399–410. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Shakesby, R.A.; Hiemstra, J.F.; Kulessa, B.; Luckman, A.J. Re-assessment of the age and depositional origin of the Paviland Moraine, Gower, south Wales, UK. Boreas 2018, 47, 577–592. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Campbell, S.; Bowen, D.Q. Quaternary of Wales; Geological Conservation Review Series No. 2; JNCC: Peterborough, UK, 1989; ISBN 0861395700. [Google Scholar]
  22. Griffiths, A.P. Recent work at Bacon Hole, Gower. Gower J. 1972, 23, 76–77. [Google Scholar]
  23. Megaw, J.V.S.; Green, H.S. A possible bone flute from Bacon Hole Cave. J. Gower Soc. 1978, 29, 52–54. [Google Scholar]
  24. Poucher, P. Archaeological Survey: Pennard and Bishopston; National Trust: London, UK, 2002. [Google Scholar]
  25. Rutter, J.G. Prehistoric Gower the Archaeology of West Glamorgan; Welsh Guides: Swansea, UK, 1948. [Google Scholar]
  26. Wheeler, R.E.M. Prehistoric and Roman Wales; The Clarendon Press: Oxford, UK, 1925; p. 38. [Google Scholar]
  27. Sollas, W.J. Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representation, 3rd ed.; Macmillan: New York, NY, USA, 1924. [Google Scholar]
  28. Harman, J. ‘Using Decorrelation Stretch to Enhance Rock Art Images’ 2005, en Dstretch. Available online: https://www.dstretch.com/AlgorithmDescription.html (accessed on 11 August 2025).
  29. Hoffmann, D.L.; Pike, A.W.; García-Diez, M.; Pettitt, P.B.; Zilhão, J. Methods for U-series dating of CaCO3 crusts associated with Palaeolithic cave art and application to Iberian sites. Quat. Geochronol. 2016, 36, 104–119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Scholz, D.; Hoffmann, D. 230Th/U-dating of fossil corals and speleothems. E&G Quat. Sci. J. 2008, 57, 52–76. [Google Scholar]
  31. Hoffmann, D.L.; Standish, C.D.; García-Diez, M.; Pettitt, P.B.; Milton, J.A.; Zilhão, J. U-Th dating of carbonate crusts reveals Neandertal origin of Iberian cave art. Science 2018, 359, 912–915. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  32. Jiao, Y.; Liu, Y.; Lu, Z.; Grün, R.; Shao, Q. U-series in situ dating of secondary carbonates associated with rock paintings using LA-MC-ICPMS. Quat. Geochronol. 2024, 82, 101552. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Shao, Q.; Li, C.; Huang, M.; Liao, Z.; Arps, J.; Huang, C.; Chou, Y.; Kong, X. Interactive programs of MC-ICPMS data processing for 230Th/U geochronology. Quat. Geochronol. 2019, 51, 43–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Cheng, H.; Edwards, R.; Shen, C.; Polyak, V.; Asmerom, Y.; Woodhead, J.; Hellstrom, J.; Wang, Y.; Kong, X.; Spötl, C.; et al. Improvements in 230Th dating, 230Th and 234U half-life values, and U–Th isotopic measurements by multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Earth Planet Sci. Lett. 2013, 371, 82–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Holden, N.E. Total half-lives for selected nuclides. Pure Appl. Chem. 1990, 62, 941–958. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Goldstein, S.J.; Murrell, M.T.; Janecky, D.R. Th and U isotopic systematics of basalts from the Juan de Fuca and Gorda Ridges by mass spectrometry. Earth Planet Sci. Lett. 1989, 96, 134–146. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Čiuladienė, A.; Luckutė, A.; Kiuberis, J.; Kareiva, A. Investigation of the chemical composition of red pigments and binding media. Chemija 2018, 29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Yang, W.-C.; Bao, H.-Y.; Liu, Y.-Y.; Nie, Y.-Y.; Yang, J.-M.; Hong, P.-Z.; Zhang, Y. Depsidone Derivatives and a Cyclopeptide Produced by Marine Fungus Aspergillus unguis under Chemical Induction and by Its Plasma Induced Mutant. Molecules 2018, 23, 2245. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  39. Hernanz, A.; Mas, M.; Gavilán, B.; Hernández, B. Raman microscopy and IR spectroscopy of prehistoric paintings from Los Murciélagos cave (Zuheros, Córdoba, Spain). J. Raman Spectrosc. 2006, 37, 492–497. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Esper, J.; Cook, E.R.; Schweingruber, F.H. Low-Frequency Signals in Long Tree-Ring Chronologies for Reconstructing Past Temperature Variability. Science 2002, 295, 2250–2253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  41. Wanner, H.; Pfister, C.; Neukom, R. The variable European Little Ice Age. Quat. Sci. Rev. 2002, 287, 107531. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Luterbacher, J.; Werner, J.P.; Smerdon, J.E.; Fernández-Donado, L.; González-Rouco, F.J.; Barriopedro, D.; Ljungqvist, F.C.; Büntgen, U.; Zorita, E.; Wagner, S.; et al. European summer temperatures since Roman times. Environ. Res. Lett. 2016, 11, 024001. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Cook, E.R.; Seager, R.; Kushnir, Y.; Briffa, K.R.; Büntgen, U.; Frank, D.; Krusic, P.J.; Tegel, W.; van der Schrier, G.; Andreu-Hayles, L.; et al. Old world megadroughts and pluvials during the Common Era. Sci. Adv. 2015, 1, e150056. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Neukom, R.; Steiger, N.; Gómez-Navarro, J.J.; Wang, J.; Werner, J.P. No evidence for globally coherent warm and cold periods over the preindustrial Common Era. Nature 2019, 571, 550–554. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Panitz, S.; Rogerson, M.; Longman, J.; Scroxton, N.; Lawson, T.J.; Atkinson, T.C.; Ersek, V.; Baldini, J.; Baldini, L.; Umbo, S.; et al. Spatio-temporal dynamics of speleothem growth and glaciation in the British Isles. Clim. Past 2025, 21, 261–278. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  46. Clark, C.D.; Ely, J.C.; Hindmarsh, R.C.A.; Bradley, S.; Ignéczi, A.; Fabel, D.; Cofaigh, C.Ó.; Chiverrell, R.C.; Scourse, J.; Benetti, S.; et al. Growth and retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet, 31,000 to 15,000 years ago: The BRITICE-CHRONO reconstruction. Boreas 2022, 51, 699–758. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Hoffmann, D.L.; Utrilla, P.; Bea, M.; Pike, A.W.; García-Diez, M.; Zilhão, J.; Domingo, R. U-series dating of Palaeolithic rock art at Fuente del Trucho (Aragón, Spain). Quat. Int. 2017, 432, 50–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Brown, T. The Bronze Age climate and environment of Britain. Bronze Age Rev. 2008, 1, 7–22. [Google Scholar]
  49. Barber, K.E.; Chambers, F.M.; Maddy, D. Holocene palaeoclimates from peat stratigraphy: Macrofossil proxy-climate records from three oceanic raised peat bogs in England and Ireland. Quat. Sci. Rev. 2003, 22, 521–539. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Armit, I.; Swindles, G.T.; Becker, K.; Plunkett, G.; Blaauw, M. Rapid climate change did not cause population collapse at the end of the European Bronze Age. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2014, 111, 17045–17049. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Location of Bacon Hole (courtesy of OS Open Source).
Figure 1. Location of Bacon Hole (courtesy of OS Open Source).
Quaternary 09 00043 g001
Figure 2. Eastern view of the cave entrance and the Bristol Channel.
Figure 2. Eastern view of the cave entrance and the Bristol Channel.
Quaternary 09 00043 g002
Figure 3. View of the main gallery, looking northwest.
Figure 3. View of the main gallery, looking northwest.
Quaternary 09 00043 g003
Figure 4. A substantial breccia deposit, located around the current entrance area of the cave.
Figure 4. A substantial breccia deposit, located around the current entrance area of the cave.
Quaternary 09 00043 g004
Figure 5. The discoverers—H. Breuil (on the left) and W. Sollas (on the right)—of then controversial Upper Palaeolithic rock art in the British Isles.
Figure 5. The discoverers—H. Breuil (on the left) and W. Sollas (on the right)—of then controversial Upper Palaeolithic rock art in the British Isles.
Quaternary 09 00043 g005
Figure 6. The first photograph of the panel, taken in 1913 by W.L. Morgan.
Figure 6. The first photograph of the panel, taken in 1913 by W.L. Morgan.
Quaternary 09 00043 g006
Figure 7. Raw image showing the heavily graffitied western hall of the side chamber (top); same image with D-Stretch filter (bottom).
Figure 7. Raw image showing the heavily graffitied western hall of the side chamber (top); same image with D-Stretch filter (bottom).
Quaternary 09 00043 g007
Figure 8. The W.L. Morgan photograph of the panel in 1913 (left photo); D-Stretch filtered photo in 2024 (right photo).
Figure 8. The W.L. Morgan photograph of the panel in 1913 (left photo); D-Stretch filtered photo in 2024 (right photo).
Quaternary 09 00043 g008
Figure 9. The panel in 2024 (left photo); D-Stretch filtered photo in 2024 (right photo).
Figure 9. The panel in 2024 (left photo); D-Stretch filtered photo in 2024 (right photo).
Quaternary 09 00043 g009
Figure 10. Bacon Hole cave panel sampling spot distribution.
Figure 10. Bacon Hole cave panel sampling spot distribution.
Quaternary 09 00043 g010
Table 1. Description of samples removed in the campaign of 2023 for U-Th dating (from AWGP and CS report).
Table 1. Description of samples removed in the campaign of 2023 for U-Th dating (from AWGP and CS report).
Sample 1SubsampleDescriptionLaboratory Observations
U-Th BH1A, BTowards the right tip of the lower-most line in the motif. Continuous flowstone with a number of cauliflower formations either under it or as part of it. Pigment appears to continue underneath the flowstone.In comparison with BH2, sample BH1 appears to be too pale to be on top of pigment. Not dated.
U-Th BH2A, BSimilar formation to BH1 and immediately adjacent to the right. Good continuous pigment revealed.Good sample for minimum age.
U-Th BH3A, BSimilar formation to BH2 and immediately adjacent to the right. Good continuous pigment revealed.Good sample for minimum age.
U-Th BH4A, BContinuous but thin flowstone in the centre of lowest red line c. 1 cm above BH2 on convex section of wall. Pigment clearly visible beneath.Good sample for minimum age.
U-Th BH5ARelatively fresh break in painted flowstone to the far left of second-lowest red line revealed solid laminar flowstone underneath pigment. Sample taken c. 3 mm below pigment. Will give maximum age.Not dated, sample retained.
U-Th BH6ASmall cauliflower formation with white crystalline flowstone on second lowest line, c. 5 cm to the left of BH5. Some rare dark flecks (mud?). Clearly overlies pigment.Probable pigment identified in sample, not dated.
Table 2. Results of the U-Th dating: first sampling campaign in Bacon Hole (2023). All errors are at 95% confidence. 1 Ages are corrected for detrital U and Th contamination using the measured 230Th/232Th activity and an assumed detrital 238U/232Th activity ratio of 0.8 ± 0.4.
Table 2. Results of the U-Th dating: first sampling campaign in Bacon Hole (2023). All errors are at 95% confidence. 1 Ages are corrected for detrital U and Th contamination using the measured 230Th/232Th activity and an assumed detrital 238U/232Th activity ratio of 0.8 ± 0.4.
SampleLab IDSample Mass (g)238U ng/g230Th/232Th Activity230Th/238U Activity234U/238U ActivityUncorrected Age (ka)Corrected Age 1 (ka)
U-Th BH 2aGIG 49560.000961038 ± 112.11 ± 0.350.0338 ± 0.00561.5366 ± 0.00402.43 ± 0.411.51 ± 0.61
U-Th BH 2bGIG 49570.00088901 ± 111.68 ± 0.380.0309 ± 0.00731.5418 ± 0.00402.21 ± 0.521.16 ± 0.74
U-Th BH 3aGIG 49580.000411387 ± 343.81 ± 0.720.0514 ± 0.00971.5130 ± 0.00463.77 ± 0.722.99 ± 0.81
U-Th BH 3bGIG 49590.000181383 ± 761.44 ± 1.060.0297 ± 0.02391.5231 ± 0.00612.15 ± 1.750.96 ± 1.84
U-Th BH 4aGIG 49600.000771018 ± 131.91 ± 0.210.0620 ± 0.00751.5202 ± 0.00464.54 ± 0.562.66 ± 1.09
U-Th BH 4bGIG 49610.00065707 ± 1112.70 ± 0.700.2159 ± 0.01351.4050 ± 0.004718.1 ± 1.217.0 ± 1.3
Table 3. Results of the U-Th dating: second sampling campaign in Bacon Hole (2024). 1 Ages are corrected for detrital U and Th contamination using the measured 230Th/232Th activity ad an assumed detrital 238Th/232Th activity ratio of 0.8 ± 0.4 and are expressed at BP scale before AD 1950.
Table 3. Results of the U-Th dating: second sampling campaign in Bacon Hole (2024). 1 Ages are corrected for detrital U and Th contamination using the measured 230Th/232Th activity ad an assumed detrital 238Th/232Th activity ratio of 0.8 ± 0.4 and are expressed at BP scale before AD 1950.
Sample234U/238U±2σ230Th/238U±2σ230Th/232Th±2σAge (ka)±2σCorrected Age 1 (ka BP)±2σ234U/238Ui±2σMinimum Age (ka, BP)
095-CBH-1-11.5070.0150.0410.00424.10.72.90.32.30.41.510.021.9
097-CBH-1-21.5330.0120.0530.004512.31.33.80.33.50.31.540.013.2
089-CBH-4-11.9720.0140.050.00448.70.82.90.22.70.31.980.012.4
091-CBH-4-21.9780.0170.060.00497.40.93.40.33.00.31.990.022.7
093-CBH-4-31.960.0150.040.00444.60.52.30.21.90.31.970.021.6
Table 4. A resume of Bacon Hole archaeometric data of pigments (2024).
Table 4. A resume of Bacon Hole archaeometric data of pigments (2024).
SampleFTIRRamanObservations
CBH-01Calcite, haematite, lichensCalcite, haematiteThe same sample spot used in U-Series sampling
CBH-02Calcite, haematite, lichensCalcite, haematite
CBH-03Calcite, lichensCalcite, haematite
CBH-04Calcite, red earth, lichens-
CBH-05Calcite, red earth, lichensCalcite
CBH-06Calcite, red earth, lichensHaematite
CBH-07Calcite, lichens-Solid geology of the cave
CBH-08Calcite, lichens, slight trace of haematite-Cave floor
CBH-09Calcite, clay, lichens-Solid geology of the cave
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Nash, G.H.; Collado, H.; Gomes, H.; Garcês, S.; Lattao, V.; Rosina, P.; Marrocchino, E.; Eftekhari, N.; Oosterwijk, B.; Pike, A.W.G.; et al. Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic Painted Imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Quaternary 2026, 9, 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043

AMA Style

Nash GH, Collado H, Gomes H, Garcês S, Lattao V, Rosina P, Marrocchino E, Eftekhari N, Oosterwijk B, Pike AWG, et al. Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic Painted Imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Quaternary. 2026; 9(3):43. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043

Chicago/Turabian Style

Nash, George H., Hipólito Collado, Hugo Gomes, Sara Garcês, Virginia Lattao, Pierluigi Rosina, Elena Marrocchino, Negar Eftekhari, Barbara Oosterwijk, Alistair W. G. Pike, and et al. 2026. "Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic Painted Imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales" Quaternary 9, no. 3: 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043

APA Style

Nash, G. H., Collado, H., Gomes, H., Garcês, S., Lattao, V., Rosina, P., Marrocchino, E., Eftekhari, N., Oosterwijk, B., Pike, A. W. G., Hoffmann, D. L., Standish, C. D., Hiemstra, J. F., & Shao, Q. (2026). Rediscovered Late Upper Palaeolithic Painted Imagery at Bacon Hole, Gower Peninsula, South Wales. Quaternary, 9(3), 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030043

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop