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The first floor

Click on the images to access information about the various spaces you will pass through during your visit.

Les objets

The spaces

Lower Gallery

All along the length of the gallery, the different material cultures of the hunter-gatherers that come one after the other beginning in 400,000 to 10,000 B.P. unfold in the lower gallery. Divided into different periods by the architecture (lower and middle Palaeolithic, upper Palaeolithic, the end of the ice ages…), the space is given structure by the large “Passage of Time” display. The true backbone of the lower gallery, the Passage of Time Display has four long patterned bands superimposed on about fifty metric units simulating the netting of time. The lower band is consecrated to the environment, and the three others comprise, for each unit, industrial and zoogeographic sets chosen in a statistical way for each archaeological layer. In line with the Passage of Time Display, the crosswise route allows visitors to follow the evolution of cultures, the first tools, made first of stone then of bone, their specifications, in short, their adaptation to climate fluctuations, especially the ice ages that have clear repercussions on the botanical environment and the fauna, two things that the survival of Palaeolithic populations directly depended on. For each culture there is information available for visitors dealing with the material aspects (typology, tool and weapon technology) and also the Paleoethnographical aspects (anthropology, funeral traditions and social organisation, acquisition activities, symbolic expression…) and also Paleo-environmental aspects (fauna. To learn more about the “Passage of Time Display” The lower band shows the climatic variations that marked the Pleistocene epoch and illustrates the consequences with five plant environment overview boards and three recreations of the local landscape in various climates. Based only on the animals hunted by Palaeolithic man, the zoogeographic band also contributes to the environmental approach by signalling the presence of cold-climate animals (muskoxen, reindeer, Saiga antelopes…) or those living in more temperate climates (deer, bovines…). The third band summarizes the sequences of the great reference sites whose industrial assemblies are dated in relation to their stratigraphical position. The third band summarizes the sequences of the great reference sites whose industrial assemblies are dated in relation to their stratigraphical position. The Crosswise Route In line with the Passage of Time Display, the crosswise route allows visitors to follow the evolution of cultures, the first tools, made first of stone then of bone, their specifications, in short their adaptation to climate fluctuations, especially the ice ages that have clear repercussions on the botanical environment and the fauna, two things that the survival of Palaeolithic populations directly depended on. For each culture there is information available for visitors dealing with the material aspects (typology, tool and weapon technology) and also the Paleoethnographical aspects (anthropology, funeral traditions and social organisation, acquisition activities, symbolic expression…). Other aspects that are addressed: The first traces of human settlement in south-western France (“The First Aquitani”) The lifestyle of the Neanderthal populations (“The Time of Neanderthal Man”) The arrival of modern man (The Upper Palaeolithic”…) The upper Palaeolithic cultures (Aurignacian, Gravettian, Solutrean, Magdalenian) The end of the ice ages… In the same way, the “fauna notes” allow visitors to go back to the environmental conditions of each period through a new section of the visit based on an education presentation with: reconstructed skeletons (bison, reindeer, Saiga antelope) Moldings (a hyena’s den, a Woolly rhinoceros…) At the end of this section of the visit, after a mention of the Neolithic and the Bronze Age, a concept of the morphological evolution of the regional landscapes is displayed on a multimedia model, complete with a summary of the territorial organisation of Prehistoric time.

Lower Gallery

The spaces

The "Camp des petits Sapiens"

The Camp des petits Sapiens is now accessible again! Some changes have been made to allow you to enjoy this space while respecting sanitary measures. Watch the Archaeology Experts on the big screen, a series of 10 animated films on the archaeological professions told with humor. Don't hesitate to take a break with your family during your visit!

The "Camp des petits Sapiens"

The spaces

Staircase to the Upper Gallery

The progression from the access stairway to the upper gallery evokes the collection of the first raw materials for stone tools, thus providing an introduction to the paleoethnography gallery on the second floor. The decision was made to place blocks of raw materials (flint, round stones, rock plates) on display in order to give the visitor a precise idea of the appearance of the raw materials discovered in nature. Each model is partially embedded in the lateral wall and can be touched by visitors.

Staircase to the Upper Gallery