• The “Cave of Hands” is 18-20km from the Estancia Cueva de las manos (formerly Estancia Los Toldos, see my review).
  • Las Cueva de las Manos is tucked in the valley of the Pinturas River, in an isolated spot of the Argentine Patagonia, accessible via long gravel dirt roads.
  • The Cueva de las manos is archaeological cellar where you can see many cave paintings, located in the deep canyon of Río Pinturas, river paintings.
  • Cueva de las Manos'un İspanyol ismi, El Mağarası olarak tercüme edilebilir. Bu mağara, paleontolojik açıdan dünyanın en ilginç yerlerinden biridir.
  • Cueva de los Manos. “This is the bit where everyone likes to take photos,” my guide tells me as she points to the hands on the cave wall.
  • Some of these people eventually arrived at Monte Verde, directly west over the spine of the Andes from Cuevas de las Manos 12,500 to 14,500 years ago.
  • La Cueva de las Manos, or the Cave of Hands, looks out over a lush and narrow valley that the Rio Pinturas has carved through the terrain.
  • The Cueva de las Manos, Río Pinturas, contains an exceptional assemblage of cave art, executed between 13,000 and 9,500 years ago.
  • Quite by accident, in 1941, a simply unique cave was discovered in Argentina, which was called Cueva de las Manos, which in translation sounds nothing more than.
  • The rock art of Cueva de las Manos exists in five concentrations, with later figures and motifs often superimposed upon those from earlier periods.