AdvertisementAn eight-mile wall of prehistoric rock art featuring animals and humans has been discovered in the Amazonian rainforest after it was created up to 12,500 years ago. It is so remote that after the British-Colombian research team drove for two hours, they were forced to trek on foot for another four. It's going to take generations to record them … Every turn you do, it's a new wall of paintings. At one point the team even came face to face with the deadliest viper in the Americas - the bushmaster. Some of the paintings are extremely high up on relatively sheer rock face, which at-first baffled the research team.
Source: Daily Mail November 29, 2020 17:42 UTC