Post-Flood Ice Age Artwork in the Amazon

So how did those get up there? Humans, unlike apes, like to express creativity in many ways. Mayhaps there is something about flat surfaces that prompts people to commence drawing and painting, as this has gone one for millennia — even during the Ice Age.

Ice Age artwork in Colombia are controversial among evolutionists for several reasons, including the age of forests. Creationists have better answers.
Credits: NASA / U.S. Army Engineer Research & Development Center
Modified at PhotoFunia (None of the aforementioned folks endorse anything on this site)
We know about how ancient cave paintings thwart evolutionary timelines and how art in the British Isles show abstract thought. More recent discoveries show that Ice Age rock paintings over a large area are troubling to atoms-to-anthropologist evolutionary beliefs and old-earth timelines. Not only was the surface prepped, but they used ladders of some sort to get up there.

These facts, and other conundrums concerning speculations on the Ice Age forests, are causing consternation to secularists. However, once again the evidence supports Genesis Flood and Ice Age models. Humans are created in God's image, and created recently. The expression of art as well as physical evidence support this fact.
An extensive series of South American Ice Age artwork may be of interest to biblical creationists. In 2017 and 2018, scientists discovered a nearly eight-mile-long series of Ice Age rock paintings in the northern Colombian rainforest. Although their research was originally published in April 2020, an additional news release was issued at the end of November 2020 to coincide with the airing of a television documentary in the United Kingdom.

The “canvas” consists of thousands of red ochre paintings of handprints, geometric shapes, and representations of a wide array of animals, including now-extinct Ice Age animals. Photos and a short video discussing these images can be viewed online. This discovery is of interest to biblical creationists for at least two reasons.

Find out why all the hubbub, Bub, by traveling to "Amazonian Artwork and the Post-Flood Ice Age". The video below has some interesting information, but y'all can see that it has underlying evolutionary assumptions: