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Combe Saunière


The site of Combe Saunière was excavated by Geneste and Chadelle between 1978 and 1996. It consists of an ensemble of caves, the principal one containing a long sequence of Middle and Upper Palaeolithic deposits. The cave is situated in an open environment with small valleys and a few low cliffs with habitable caves dispersed along the river edges. Movements of human groups would have been easily possible in all seasons.

The principal locus contains a stratigraphy five metres deep that begins with a sequence of Lower and Upper Wurm deposits (isotopic stages 5 to 2), followed by several Holocene episodes. At the base of the stratigraphy, a sequence of Middle Palaeolithic deposits, dated by ESR to between 100 000 and 60 000 BP, is underlain by a substratum consisting of limestone in some areas and karstic sands in others. This sequence is overlain by Chatelperronian, Aurignacian, Gravettian and Solutrean levels, ending with levels containing a few Magdalenian objects. The radiocarbon dates of these levels extend from 38 000 to 14 000 BP.

The Solutrean levels are dated to approximately 19 000 BP. The sedimentary sequence containing Solutrean artefacts consists of three levels of variable thickness. The basal level (IVc) is 5–30 cm thick and is greatly disturbed by human activities. In some locations it fills in depressions in the directly underlying Gravettian level. It is overlain by a second level (IVb), 10–50 cm thick, and a third thinner level that is more significantly disturbed (IVa).


Text above adapted fromCastel et al. (2002)



Combe Saunière

Combe Saunière, 45.225922° N, 0.877655° E, elevation 168 metres.
Photo: Google Maps



Combe Saunière location map





Geology of the region within 3 or 4 kilometres of Combe Saunière.

Photo:Le Pochat et al. (1979) inAjas et al. (2013)






Combe Saunière location map





Location of Combe Saunière, No. 3 on this map of Solutrean sites in Southwest France.

Location of Solutrean sites in Southwest France (black circles). Numbers 1-11 are sites with well preservedfaunas: 1 Le Placard; 2 Le Fourneau-du-Diable;3 Combe Saunière; 4 Badegoule; 5 Laugerie-Haute; 6 Les Jamblancs;7 Grotte XVI à Cénac; 8 Pech de la Boissière; 9 Le Cuzoul de Vers; 10 Les Peyrugues; 11 Sainte-Eulalie.

Photo and text:Castel et al. (2002)











Combe Saunière Fauna from the Solutrean
SpeciesNumber of Identified SpecimensMinimum Number of Individuals
Reindeer ( Rangifer tarandus )499840
Horse ( Equus caballus )5137
Bovines ( Bos orBison )922
Chamois ( Rupicapra rupicapra )835
Saiga Antelope ( Saiga tatarica )443
Red Deer ( Cervus elaphus )434
Steppe Ass ( Equus hydruntinus )41
Ibex ( Capra ibex )31
Boar ( Sus scrofa )11
 
Hare ( Lepus sp. )30312
Ground Squirrel ( Citellus sp. )17114
Rabbit ( Oryctolagus cuniculus )815
Mole ( Talpa sp. )116
Hedgehog ( Erinaceus sp. )11
 
Mammoth ( Mammuthus sp. )11
 
Fox ( Vulpes vulpes )56018
Wolf ( Canis lupus )523
Bear ( Ursus sp. )234
Badger ( Meles meles )172
Mustelid ( Martes orMustela sp. )82
Hyena ( Crocuta spelaea )21
 
Goosander ( Mergus merganster )193
cf. Goosander ( Mergus cf.merganster )71
Kestrel ( Falco tinnunculus )72
cf. Kestrel ( Falco cf.tinnunculus )41
Ptarmigan ( Lagopus lagopus )91
Raven ( Corvus corax )92
cf. Peregrine ( Falco cf. peregrinus )62
Grey Partridge ( Perdix perdix )43
Goose ( Ansersp. )32
Jackdaw ( Corvus monedula )32
Little Owl ( Athena noctua )21
Diving Duck ( Aythiasp. )11
Chough ( Pyrrhocorax graculus )11



Table of Combe Saunière Fauna from the Solutrean

Above table fromCastel et al. (2002)




Combe Saunière coupe

The stratigraphy of Combe Saunière.

Bronze Age and historic layers omitted for clarity.

Photo:Cosgrove, Geneste and Castel (2013)



Combe Saunière plan

Plan of Combe Saunière.

Photo:Cosgrove, Geneste and Castel (2013)



Geneste
Jean-Michel Geneste, one of France's foremost archaeologists and an expert on Rock Art, on the set of 'Cave of Forgotten Dreams'.

Curator then research director of the cave of Lascaux, he has been for more than two decades attached to the archaeological study of decorated caves. He has directed the multidisciplinary study program at the Chauvet-Pont d'Arc cave since 2002.

He has coordinated archaeological research programs in France, Ukraine, South Africa, Papua New Guinea and currently in Arnhem Land, Australia. He has edited books on the Palaeolithic and Rock Art and has published a large number of articles.

Jean-Michel Geneste went to Chauvet cave to study the archaeological remains including the lithic and bone industries and their distribution at the site, whose analyses he coordinated with the researchers involved, leading to the determination of the supply territories used by groups occupying the cave.


Photo: history.com, via Stella Tsank, https://www.pinterest.com.au/source/history.com/
Text: Translated and adapted from http://archeologie.culture.fr/chauvet/fr/auteur/jean-michel-geneste



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■   6: Grattoirs, scrapers on the end of a blade

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■   7: Burins

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■   8: Retouched tools
■ 11: Notched/denticulated tools

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 10: Microliths
■ 12: Racloirs/raclettes, side scrapers and small, often round scrapers

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 13: Armatures, tools

( On the left is a classic Solutrean laurel leaf point, with shouldered points on the right. A shouldered point, kerfspits or pointe à cran is a projectile or blade that has a stem which was designed for hafting on a shaft or handle - Don )

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac



Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 13: Armatures, tools

( Shouldered points quite often came back from the hunt broken, but still attached to the valuable shafts, and were discarded at the living area when a new point was attached to the undamaged or repaired shaft. Thus they appear quite often in the archaeological record. An example in this image is the broken, pink/yellow flint shouldered point on the lower right, a beautiful piece in every way, from the flint used to the elegant shape to the superb pressure flaking. It must have been disappointing for the hunter to have it break - Don )

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac




Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

Solutreanpointes à cran from layer 4, with characteristic flake scars and impact striations.

Photo and text:Geneste et Plisson (1986)




Combe Saunière toolsCombe Saunière tools




Method of attachment of apointe à cran.

Putting a groove in the shaft of the dart and gluing thepointe à cran to the shaft using pine resin took about fifteen minutes work.

Photo and text:Geneste et Plisson (1986)




Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 14: Composite tools
■ 15: Special tools


Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac




Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 16: Bone industry

On the left is a piece of reindeer antler, possibly with shallow engraving, on the right a crochet or hook from a propulseur, or spear thrower, the earliest such example extant.

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac




Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

The oldest known propulseur or spear thrower, dating from the upper Solutrean, and coming from layer 4 of Combe-Saunière.

Text:Rillardon (2010)
Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac




Combe Saunière toolsCombe Saunière tools



In 1986, a small hook made in reindeer antler was found in the Upper Solutrean level of the Combe-Saunière 1 cave (Dordogne). The morphology and dimensions of the object denote a perfect integration within the series of palaeolithic and precolumbian spearthrowers in antler. It shows a particular similarity with three palaeolithic spearthrowers found in the Placard cave (Charentes) in the XlXth century. Experimental reconstruction demonstrates its efficiency.

Photo and text:Cattelain (1989)




bone needlesbone needles
In addition to the abundant representation of spear points (37 examples were found), five needles were found in layer 4, and three of them have an eye, although one is broken.

These latest discoveries, together with those of Laugerie-Haute Est and the Fritsch shelter confirm the appearance of this type of object at the end of the Solutrean.

Photo (left):Geneste et Plisson (1986)

Photo (right): Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac

Text:Geneste et Plisson (1986)




Combe Saunière tools
Combe Saunière, layer 4, excavations of J.-M. Geneste.

Age: Solutrian, circa 19 000 BP.

■ 16: Bone industry

( these bone or reindeer antler objects were not identified by the museum as to purpose. From left to right, my identifications are:

Spear point (or possibly a small wedge), awl (with a broken tip, and decorated with notches), double ended projectile point (according toCastel et al. (2002)), eyed needle as described above, projectile point (according toCastel et al. (2002)), bone/antler tool used as a wedge (very similar to one described byCastel et al. (2002)).  - Don 
)

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014
Source: Originals, Le Musée National de Préhistoire, Les Eyzies-de-Tayac









References

  1. Ajas, A., Bertran, P., Lemée, L., Queffelec, A., 2013: Stratigraphy and Palaeopedology of the Palaeolithic Cave Site of Combe-Saunière, Southwest France. ,Geoarchaeology, 28(5), 432–449. https://doi.org/10.1002/GEA.21451
  2. Castel J, Liolios D., Laroulandie V., Chauvière F., Chadelle J., Pike-Tay A., Geneste J., 2002: 17. Solutrean Animal Resource Exploitation at CombeSaunière (Dordogne, France),Integrating Zooarchaeology, ed. Mark Maltby, 9th ICAZ Conference, Durham 2002, pp. 138–152
  3. Cattelain P., 1989: Un crochet de propulseur solutréen de la grotte de Combe-Saunière 1 (Dordogne), in: Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, tome 86, no. 7, 1989. pp. 213-216; doi : 10.3406/bspf.1989.9386 http://www.persee.fr/doc/bspf_0249-7638_1989_num_86_7_9386
  4. Cosgrove R., Geneste J-M., Castel J-C, 2013: Perspectives on Global Comparative Hunter–Gatherer Archaeology: Glacial Southwest Tasmania and Southwest France, in:Archaeology in Environment and Technology Intersections and Transformations, Publisher: Routledge, pp 13-40
  5. Geneste J-M., Plisson H., 1986: Le Solutréen de la grotte de Combe Saunière 1 (Dordogne). Première approche palethnologique,Gallia préhistoire, tome 29, fascicule 1, 1986. pp. 9-27; doi : 10.3406/galip.1986.2240 http://www.persee.fr/doc/galip_0016-4127_1986_num_29_1_2240
  6. Le Pochat, G., Guillot, P.L., Platel, J.P., Recoing, L., & Texier, J.P., 1979:Carte géologique de la France à 1/50 000, Périgueux-Est (no. 759; 28 p.), BRGM, Orléans, France
  7. Rillardon M., 2010: Environnement et subsistance des derniers chasseurs-cueilleurs dans la basse vallee dur Rhone et ses Marges du Pleniglaciaire superieur (20 ka BP) à l'optimum climatique (8 ka BP),Archéologie et Préhistoire, Aix-Marseille Université, 2010.



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This page last updated: Tuesday, 11th May 2021 11:04


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Note, however, that the Ägyptischen Museum München and the Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel permit photography of its exhibits for private, educational, scientific, non-commercial purposes. If you intend to use any photos from these sources for any commercial use, please contact the relevant museum and ask for permission.

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My background

Some people have expressed interest in knowing a little bit about me. For those people, here is a potted biography:

I live in New South Wales, Australia, and I am a retired high school mathematics/science teacher.

The Donsmaps site is totally independent of any other influence. I work on it for my own pleasure, and finance it myself. I started before there was an internet, when I thought I could do a better job of the small map on the end papers of Jean Auel's wonderful book, Valley of the Horses, by adding detail and contour lines, and making a larger version. I have always loved maps since I was a young boy.

I had just bought a black and white 'fat Mac' with a whopping 512 kB of memory (!), and no hard disk. With a program called 'Super Paint' and a lot of double work (hand tracing first the maps of Europe from atlases, then scanning the images on the tracing paper, then merging the scanned images together, then tracing these digital scans on the computer screen), I made my own black and white map.

Then the internet came along, the terms of my internet access gave me space for a small website, and Don's Maps started. I got much better computers and software over the years, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator for example, and my maps became colourised and had more detail. I did a lot of maps of thetravels of Ayla from Jean Auel's books, and I gradually included other pages with more and more photos available from the web, and scanned from books or from scientific papers, since I was not happy with the quality generally available. I became very interested in the Venus figurines, and set out to make acomplete record of the ice age ones. Along the way I got interested in archaeology for its own sake.

In 2008 my wife and I went to Europe, and when we arrived in Frankfurt at sunrise after the 24 hour plane trip from Sydney, while my wife left on her own tour with her sister, they visited relatives in Germany and Austria, I went off by myself on the train to Paris. Later that afternoon I took a train to Brive-la-Gaillarde, found a hotel and caught up on lost sleep. The next morning I hired a car, and over the next four weeks visited and photographed many of the original archaeological sites in the south of France, as well as many archaeological museums. It was a wonderful experience.My wife and I met up again later in the Black Forest, andcycled down the Danube from its source to Budapest, camping most of the way, a wonderful trip, collecting many photos, including a visit toDolni Vestonice in the Czech Republic, as well as visiting the Vienna natural history museum. Jean Auel fans will realise the significance of that trip!

Luckily I speak French, the trips to France would have been difficult or impossible otherwise. No one outside large cities speaks English (or they refuse to). I was travelling independently, not as part of a tour group. I never knew where I was going to be the next night, and I camped nearly everywhere, except for large cities. I am a very experienced bushwalker (hiker) and have the required equipment -a one-man ultra lightweight tent, sleeping bag, stove, raincoat, and so on, all of which I make myself for use here when I go bushwalking, especially down the beautiful gorges east of Armidale, though for Europe I use a commercial two person lightweight tent, since weight is not so much of a problem when cycling or using a car, and in any case my wife was with me when cycling, once along the Donau from its source to Budapest in 2008, and again from Amsterdam to Copenhagen and then up the Rhine from Köln to the Black Forest in 2014, both of which were memorable and wonderful trips.

In 2012 we went to Canada for a wedding and to visit old friends, and I took the opportunity to visit the wonderful Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, where I took many photographs of the items on exhibit, particularly of the superb display of artefacts of theFirst Nations of the Pacific Northwest.

In 2014 my wife and I did another European cycling tour, fromAmsterdam to Copenhagen, then from Cologne up the Rhine to the Black Forest, camping most of the way in each case, and taking many useful photos in museums along the way, including the museums at Leiden, Netherlands, andRoskilde in Denmark, and the National Museum in Copenhagen. Again, I later hired a car and did more photography and visited many more sites in France.

In 2015 I made a lone visit to all the major museums in western Europe by public transport, mostly by train, and that went very well. I had learned a lot of German while travelling with my wife, who is a fluent speaker of the language, and of all the European countries, Germany is my favourite. I feel comfortable there. I love the people, the food, and the beer. Germans are gemütlich, I have many friends there now.

I repeated the visit to western Europe in 2018, to fill in some gaps of museums I had not visited the first time, because they were either closed for renovation the first time (such as the Musée de l'Homme in Paris) or because I ran out of time, or because I wanted to fill in some gaps from major museums such as the British Museum, the Berlin Museum, München, the Louvre, the Petrie and Natural History Museums in London, the Vienna Natural History Museum, the important museum in Brno, and museums in northern Germany. It takes at least two visits, preferably three, to thoroughly explore the items on display in a major museum.

I spend a lot of time on the site, typically at least a few hours a day, often more. I do a lot of translation of original papers not available in English, a time consuming but I believe a valuable task. People and fate have been very generous to me, and it is good to give back a very small part of what I have been given. With the help of online translation apps and use of online dictionaries there are few languages I cannot translate, though I find Czech a challenge!

Life has been kind to me, I want for nothing, and am in good health. Not many in the world are as lucky as I am, and I am grateful for my good fortune.

My best wishes to all who read and enjoy the pages of my site.



May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
And may rain on a tin roof lull you to sleep at night.


Webmaster: Don Hitchcock

Email:don@donsmaps.com



Website last updated Monday 10 March 2025

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