Peñas de Cabrera
The archaeological site Peñas de Cabrera, containing numerous rock shelters, is located in the municipality of Casabermeja (Spain). The entire surrounding area of Las Peñas de Cabrera, rife with natural minerals, rocks and fossils, is named after one of its districts of the same name. The entire complex of mountains and valleys consists of many shelters revealing rock art of paintings and engravings. In the early 1970s the University of Málaga began research in Peñas de Cabrera, focusing particularly on its rock and cave paintings. Thereafter the area became well known to the scientific community, as the University had laid the groundwork for all subsequent exploration. The shelters and caves were later studied by eminent researchers who carried out archaeological surveys, tracings,[1] and topographical mappings and drew up an inventory of rock and cave paintings. One hundred and thirty five cave paintings spread out over twenty shelters were discovered. As of 2016 thirty-two rock shelters featuring paintings, engravings and archaeological material, mainly ceramic and flint (Silex), have been recorded. Alongside these are also a number of shelters being studied that show scientific potential, but which are pending investigation depending upon the results of further archaeological surveys.
Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Peñas de Cabrera (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).Peñas de Cabrera
Calle Palomo,
Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Show on map
Geographical coordinates (GPS)
| Latitude | Longitude |
|---|---|
| N 36.894444444444 ° | E -4.4297222222222 ° |
Address
Calle Palomo
Calle Palomo
29160
Andalusia, Spain
Open on Google Maps