Cultural Heritage of Wallonia (1979); Exceptional Cultural Heritage of Wallonia (2013)
TheSchmerling Caves (also known asGrottes d'Engis, meaningEngis Caves) are a group of caves located inWallonia on the right bank of the stream called the Awirs, near the village ofAwirs inFlémalle,Belgium. The caves are notable for their past fossil finds, particularly ofhominins. They were explored in 1829 byPhilippe-Charles Schmerling, who discovered, in the lower cave, the remains of two individuals, one of which, now known asEngis 2, was a fossil of the firstNeanderthal ever found; the other was aNeolithichomo sapiens. Also known asTrô Cwaheur orTrou Caheur, this lower cave has since collapsed. A third cave was destroyed because of work on the adjacentquarry, the Ancienne Carrière des Awirs.
View of the Awirs quarry, with overhanging Plateau des Fagnes in the valley of Awirs, on the right bank of the stream, coming from the confluence with theMeuse. The caves are to the right of the quarry.
Schmerling named the caves forEngis because he accessed them from the Plateau des Fagnes, which is in the Engis commune. He was able to reach them by lowering himself with a rope and sliding down the slope of the rock face. The caves themselves are actually within the boundaries of the commune ofAwirs.[3] In 1951, a local group "corrected" the error by placing a plaque at the lower cave, identifying it as the Schmerling Cave.[4]
Schmerling thought he had found the remains of three people in the caves. In the vicinity, he also found tools fashioned by humans.[5] The tools and the carvings made withsilex led him to argue that "antediluvian" man's hands must have been responsible even if human remains hadn't been found; Schmerling was thus one of the first to accept the existence of a prehistoric human. The child's skull was not identified as Neanderthal until 1936.[6]
A monument for Schmerling, consisting of a bust on a base made of stone, was erected at the foot of the hill in 1989; it was moved to the town square of Awirs in 2001.[4]
Upper cave; above,plateau des Fagnes from which Schmerling descended
The measurements of the upper cave, which opens to the north, are 5m wide, 6m high, 17m deep,[clarification needed] with a small gallery on the right. At its entrance, in 2m of soil, Schmerling found:[7]
The lower cave was known as Trô Cwaheur.[4] It also opened to the north but has since been destroyed[8] following collapses in 1993 and 2006.[9] At the time of Schmerling's exploration, it measured 4 m wide by 5 m high. A first chamber was 12 m deep[clarification needed] and the cave continued beyond as a gallery with soil and bones. To the left of the entrance was another gallery withstalactites measuring 150cm long. Another gallery ascended into a second, smaller, chamber which was strewn with bones:[7]
bones of bear, hyena, rhinoceros; some entire, some broken and showing evidence of having been moved by water
next to animal remains, the skull ofNeolithichomo sapiens, an older individual with the facial bones missing; designated Engis 1
a second skull which fell to pieces when touched. Examination of the upper jaw revealed that adult molars had not yet descended: the individual was 5 or 6 years old at the time of death, and was designatedEngis 2, following Schmerling.Milk teeth,collarbone, fragments of a radial bone, ulna, and vertebrae were found as well, leading the discoverer to think he had found the remains of three different individuals. The skull is registered as anational treasure on theList of Classified Properties of the French Community [fr].
Engis 1, one of two skulls found by Schmerling, is of aNeolithic homo sapiens; collection of theCurtius Museum.
There was a third cave, to the east, which was destroyed in the exploitation of the quarry.[10] Later researchers who explored the hill found two more caves, one of them a grave site with twoNeolithic skeletons.[8]
^Direction générale opérationnelle de l'Aménagement du territoire, du Logement, du Patrimoine et de l'Énergie (DGO4) (2018)."Grottes Schmerling".Biens classés et Zones de protection. Service Public Wallonie (SPW). 62120-CLT-0006-01, DGO4: FLEMALLE/4.Archived from the original on 9 November 2018. Retrieved8 November 2018 – via lampspw.wallonie.be DGO4 website archive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^DGO4 (2018)."Les grottes Schmerling".Biens exceptionnels. SPW. 62120-PEX-0001-02.Archived from the original on 9 November 2018. Retrieved8 November 2018 – via lampspw.wallonie.be.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^abc"Les Chroniques"(PDF). Commission historique de la commune de Flémalle. April 2010. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved28 October 2018.
^Winkler, T. C. (1877)."Vierde hoofdstuk".De mensch voor de geschiedenis (in Dutch). Leiden: P. van Santen. pp. 81–122.
^abPhilippe Charles Schmerling,Recherches sur les ossements fossiles découverts dans les cavernes de la province de Liège, Vol. I, Liège: P.-J. Collardin, 1833, pp. 30–31, 61, 62.
^Ernest Doudou, "Notes sur les grains de végétaux trouvés dans la brèche préhistorique de la Grotte d'Engis (Belgique)",Revue de l'École d'Anthropologie de Paris, January 1904, cited in: H. Desmaisons, "Blés et Céréales Préhistoriques",Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, 32.6 1935, pp. 336–43.