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Preparing Ochre Pigment for Cave Painting — Mineral Processing
Charlie

Criado por

Charlie

23. March 2026

Preparing Ochre Pigment for Cave Painting — Mineral Processing

Process raw ochre into usable pigment for painting on rock surfaces. Ochre (iron oxide-rich earth) was humanity's first pigment, used as far back as 300,000 years ago. The colour ranges from yellow (goethite) to red (hematite) depending on the mineral composition and heat treatment.

Beginner
45-60 minutes

Instruções

1

Source and Select Ochre

Ochre is iron oxide-rich earth found in exposed clay banks, riverbed deposits, and rocky outcrops worldwide. Yellow ochre contains goethite (hydrated iron oxide, FeOOH) and produces warm yellow to brown tones. Red ochre contains hematite (anhydrous iron oxide, Fe2O3) and produces deep red to maroon. Select pieces that leave a strong colour streak when rubbed on stone — the more intensely coloured the streak, the higher the pigment concentration. Avoid pieces with excessive sand or gravel inclusions, as these dilute the colour.

2

Heat-Treat for Colour Conversion (Optional)

To convert yellow ochre to red, heat the raw lumps in a fire. At approximately 250-300 degrees C, goethite (yellow) loses its chemically bound water and transforms into hematite (red). Place ochre lumps at the edge of a campfire and gradually move them closer over 30-60 minutes. The colour shift is visible — watch for the yellow to deepen through orange to red. Do not overheat past 900 degrees C or the iron oxide converts to magnetite (black) and loses its red brilliance. This thermal conversion was practiced at Blombos Cave in South Africa at least 75,000 years ago.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Grind to Fine Powder

Break the ochre into small chunks and place them on a flat sandstone grinding slab. Using a round handstone (mano), crush and grind the ochre in a circular motion with steady downward pressure. Continue grinding until the powder is fine and smooth with no gritty particles — coarse particles produce a streaky, uneven paint. The finer the grind, the more vivid and uniform the colour. Archaeological grinding stones show deep concave wear from repeated pigment processing. A single grinding session produces enough pigment for extensive painting.

4

Mix the Paint

Transfer the ground pigment to a shell or hollow stone. Add water gradually, mixing with a stick or finger-sized bone tool until the pigment reaches the desired consistency — thin and fluid for spraying techniques, thick and paste-like for direct application. For greater adhesion and durability, mix in a binder: animal fat, bone marrow, egg white, blood, or plant sap. Cave paintings at Lascaux used a mixture of ochre pigment with animal fat and calcium-rich cave water. The binder helps the pigment adhere to rough stone surfaces and resist flaking once dry.

Step 4 - Image 1
5

Application Techniques

Apply pigment to stone surfaces using several methods documented in prehistoric cave art. Direct application uses a fingertip, a chewed twig brush, or a pad of moss or animal fur. Spraying involves placing pigment in the mouth and blowing it over a stencil (such as a hand placed against the wall) to create negative-space images. Crayons can be made by mixing ochre with melted animal fat and allowing it to harden into solid sticks. On clean, dry limestone surfaces, ochre pigment bonds durably — the cave paintings at Chauvet in France have survived over 36,000 years, demonstrating the extraordinary longevity of mineral pigments on stone.

Materiais

  • Raw ochre (yellow or red earth) - several lumps, fist-sized piece
  • Water - small amount for mixing pieceReferência
    Ver
  • Animal fat or egg (as binder, optional) - small amount pieceReferência
    Ver
  • Shell or hollow stone (as paint container) - 1-2 piece

Ferramentas necessárias

  • Flat grinding stone (sandstone slab)Referência
    Ver
  • Round handstone (mano)

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