Asiaín Román, RaquelOntañon, RobertoSaura Ramos, Pedro Alberto2024-04-302024-04-302023-08-17Asiain R, Ontañon R, Saura P. Animals hidden in plain sight: stereoscopic recording of Palaeolithic rock art at La Pasiega cave, Cantabria. Antiquity. 2023;97(395):1084-1099. doi:10.15184/aqy.2023.12210.15184/aqy.2023.122https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/1037042023 Acuerdos transformativos CRUECantabrian cave art is familiar from photographs reproduced in textbooks, but these two-dimensional images do not capture the irregularities of the rock surfaces on which animals and other designs were painted or engraved. Here, the authors use stereoscopic photography to review the parietal art of La Pasiega cave. By documenting the uneven surfaces of the cave's walls alongside painted and engraved marks, they identify new animal figures and reinterpret others, previously thought to be partial representations, as complete. The results show the positioning of animal figures to make use of concave/convex surfaces and rock edges to define the outlines of animals, reinforcing the need to record and interpret cave art three-dimensionally.engAttribution 4.0 InternationalAnimals hidden in plain sight: stereoscopic recording of palaeolithic rock art at La Pasiega cave, Cantabriajournal articleopen access7.031.1:778.43IberiaPalaeolithic cave artStereoscopic photographyDecorrelation stretch analysisBellas ArtesPrehistoria62 Ciencias de las Artes y las Letras5504.05 Prehistoria