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Paleolithic rock art and archaeological finds can be found in mountain caves.
Located inside Pollino National Park, the largest protected area in Italy, Romito Cave is the site of important research into early humans, an archaeological park that explains it, and a large carving of a bull estimated to date back 12,000 years. Since its discovery in 1961, the cave has intrigued researchers, who estimate that it was inhabited since the end of the Paleolithic era. In addition to the bull carving, which depicts an auroch (a type of cattle now extinct), notable discoveries of the limestone cave include a series of graves that contain a body exhibiting dwarfism (confirming the existence of the condition this early in human history) and quantities of obsidian that suggest involvement in trading networks.