Abri de Cap Blanc | |
Exavations 1911
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Location | near Eyzies-de-Tayac, Marquay commune |
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Region | Dordogne |
Coordinates | 44°56′44″N 1°5′49″E / 44.94556°N 1.09694°ECoordinates: 44°56′44″N 1°5′49″E / 44.94556°N 1.09694°E |
History | |
Cultures | Magdalenian |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1909, |
Archaeologists | Raymond Peyrille |
UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
Criteria | Cultural: (i), (iii) |
Reference | 85-010 |
Inscription | 1979 (3rd Session) |
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The abri de Cap Blanc is a prehistoric limestone rock shelter with Magdalenian animal sculptures. It is in the Marquay commune on the right bank of the Beune River, a few kilometers west of Eyzies-de-Tayac, in Dordogne.
The site was discovered in 1908 by Raymond Peyrille under the supervision of Jean-Gaston Lalanne. Peyrille carried out its first rudimentary excavation was in 1909 while Lalanne was working at the nearby site of Laussel. During this excavation what has been described as "perhaps the most dramatic and impressive example of Upper Palaeolithic" a relief carving was found.
Following the discovery of the frieze, work was undertaken in 1911 to build a protective wall around the shelter. This included lowering the shelter floor and during this a workman hit a skull with a pick-axe, breaking it. A relatively complete skeleton was uncovered and Denis Peyrony and Louis Capitan were brought in to examine it.
The frieze depicts a number of animals, some in haut-relief, dating back 15,000 years. These include ten horses (one measuring 2.20 m long), at least three bison, ibex and several incomplete figures.
The sculpted frieze occupies 13 of the 16 meters of the shelter. Some of the carving is as much as 30 cm deep. Red ochre covers much of the frieze and some of the area around it but is now difficult to see. Among other flint tools probably used to create the frieze were found Magdalenian burins and scrapers.
The skeleton known as Magdalenian Girl (or sometimes Magdalenian Woman) is that of an early modern human dating from 13,000 to 11,000 BCE during the Magdalenian period. It is the most complete Upper Paleolithic skeleton in Northern Europe. When Magdalenian Girl was acquired in 1926 for the Field Museum in Chicago, Illinois by Henry Field, then curator of Physical Anthropology, it was hailed as one of the most significant acquisitions the museum ever made. On the first day the precious specimen was exhibited, tens of thousands of visitors flocked to the museum to see it.