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Historical Bibliography Updated: December 18, 2019

Sur la grotte de la Mouthe (Dordogne).

Publication Details

Assoc. Français pour l'Avancement des Sciences, Compte rendue de la 24me session, 1ère part., 313-314. 1895 CE.

The first report on the discovery and excavation of La Grotte de la Mouthe. This cave, found in 1894 and excavated by Rivière in 1895, was the fourth paleolithic cave art site discovered, after Altamira, Chabot and Pair-non-Pair, but it was probably the most instrumental in convincing the scientific establishment of the authenticity of cave paintings. Along with the paintings Rivière discovered one of the earliest carved stone oil lamps, dating from about 17,000 years before the present, proving that early man would have had the means to produce enough light to create the cave paintings deep within the interior of caves. The La Mouthe cave paintings, discovered in a cave that had been sealed for centuries, helped to prove the validity of the Altamira paintings and of Paleolithic cave art in general. The La Mouthe cave art consists of over 200 paintings and wall engravings of bison, horses, reindeer, cats and wolves, together with two human hands and a tectiform (rooflike) drawing. 

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#11345
Permanent Linkhttps://hom-sveltekit.fly.dev/entry/13543
Author Bio Linkwikipedia ↗
External URLsur-la-grotte-de-la-mouthe-dordogne