Les Combarelles

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File:Entrance to Les Combarelles.jpg
The entrance to Les Combarelles cave

Les Combarelles is a cave in Les Eyzies de Tayac, Dordogne, France, which was inhabited by Cro-Magnon people approximately 13–11,000 years ago. Holding more than 600 pre-historic engravings of animals and symbols, the two galleries in the cave were crucial in the re-evaluation of the mental and technical capabilities of these prehistoric humans around the turn of last century.[1]

Formed by an underground river, the cave is approximately 300 metres (980 ft) long with an average width of 1 metre (3.3 ft).[2]

Discovery

Stone tools found in the cave

Long used as a stable by local peasants who regularly found Magdalenian artefacts in the cave, the cave and its content remained unstudied by scientists for a long period.[1] It was officially discovered in September 1901 by pre-historians Denis Peyrony, Abbé Breuil, and Louis Capitan, but the entrance of the cave and the right-hand gallery had already been excavated by Émile River between 1891 and 1894. Abbé Breuil described 291 drawings divided into 105 separate sets — a discovery he himself called "an enormous firecracker in the world of prehistory."[2]

Human presence

Radiocarbon dating of bones found in the cave indicate the cave was inhabited by Cro-Magnon 13,680–11,380 before present. During that period, these people produced hundreds of drawings on the sandy cave walls, traces of dye suggesting the engraved drawings were originally coloured.

Scientists have identified 600–800 drawings of isolated animals and undecipherable tectiforms (i.e. upward-pointing wedges) in the cave. Horses appear most frequently in these drawings — isolated, in herds, and together with other animals — but the reindeer are famous for their naturalistic appearances — some of them drawn as if drinking water from the river flowing through the cave. Other animals include cave bears, cave lions, and mammoths.[2]

See also

References

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External links

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