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Cave of the Cow in Laroque dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Grotte ornée

Cave of the Cow in Laroque

    1-4 Rue du Coulet Saint-Jean
    34190 Laroque
Private property
Grotte de la Vache à Laroque
Grotte de la Vache à Laroque
Crédit photo : JYB Devot - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1664
First written entry
1905
Publication of excavations
1967
Discovery of engravings
28 mai 1990
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Grotto de la Vache (Case C 330): entry by order of 28 May 1990

Key figures

Michel Lorblanchet - Prehistory Discoverer of engravings in 1967.
Eugène Gimon - Archaeologist Author of the 1905 publication.
Frédéric Bazile - Archaeologist Rescue rounds in 1979.
Paul Gervais - Naturalist Initial search in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The cave of La Vache, also called Laroque II, is an adorned cave located in the massif of the Thaurac, in the commune of Laroque (Hérault). It opens on the left bank of the Hérault River, close to the Lauriers, Mayor and Fox caves. With a length of 18 metres, it is distinguished by its Jurassic limestones and its inscription in the Inventory of Historical Monuments since 1990, for its traces of parietal art of the Upper Magdalenian.

The first excavations date back to the 19th century, led by Paul Gervais and Cazalis de Fondouce, but it was only in 1905 that Eugene Gimon published an article in the Bulletin of the French Prehistoric Society. In 1967, Michel Lorblanchet discovered a bovid engraving associated with geometric signs, confirming the archaeological importance of the site. The furniture, preserved at the Nîmes Museum, reveals the occupations of Magdalenian V and Solutrean.

The engravings, including a 40 cm bovide covered with calcite, attest to a human occupation between the middle and recent Magdalenian. The 1979 excavations by Frédéric Bazile revealed two levels of habitat separated by a sterile layer. This site remains the only one of the Hérault to present a parietal art as well preserved, with animal figures and geometric motifs entangled.

The cave was mentioned in 1664, but its systematic study began in the 20th century. The objects discovered, such as solutrean laurel leaves, and fine stratigraphs make a rare testimony of the cultural transitions between the Solutrean and Magdalenian in Occitanie. Its archaeological filling, exceptionally rich, covers nearly 5,000 years of prehistoric occupation.

External links