Montgaudier Cave
The Montgaudier Cave is a prehistoric site in Montbron, Charente, France, occupied from the Mousterian to the Magdalenian. It has yielded Neanderthal and Homo sapiens remains, ancient faunal bones, extensive lithic and bone artifacts, and significant examples of parietal art and portable art.
Location
Located in western Montbron, east of Angoulême in Charente, the Montgaudier Cave is from the Dordogne and from Haute-Vienne. It opens into a cliff overlooking the Tardoire River, upstream from the Placard Cave, beneath a northeast-facing concave bank supporting Montgaudier Castle.
History
Excavations at Montgaudier began before 1850 with Édouard Lartet, followed by the Marquis de Vibraye, Tremeau de Rochebrune, Abbé Bourgeois, Abbé Delaunay, Fermond, and Albert Gaudry from 1867 to 1886. Further digs continued until 1959. In 1966, Louis Duport, at Jean Piveteau's request, resumed excavations, systematizing prior findings and discovering a Neanderthal jawbone in 1974. The site has been a classified site since 1942.
Topography
The cave comprises a complex system of shelters and cavities, accessed via -wide, -high porch leading to -long cavity. Key areas include the Lartet Shelter and the Tardoire section, encompassing the Gaudry and Paignon Shelters. Locus 12, excavated by Duport in 1983–1984, revealed a Magdalenian layer after test pits. Locus 11, in front of the porch, indicates a post-Magdalenian vault collapse and an ancient Tardoire riverbed.
Stratigraphy
The Great Porch contains approximately 30 sedimentary levels, dated to about 80,000 years ago, corresponding to loci 1–3, 5–6. The Lartet Shelter has six layers with an intact Mousterian level. The Gaudry Shelter includes nine layers, with Upper Magdalenian and possible Aurignacian. A Quina-type Mousterian hearth exists in the Tardoire section. Locus 12 has four levels, including Magdalenian and possibly Gravettian. The complex stratigraphy reflects extensive human activity across multiple periods.
Ancient fauna
Locus 12 yielded bones of herbivores and carnivores, radiocarbon-dated to 12,820 years BP. Saiga antelope remains were also found. Layer 13 contains archaic fauna: Ursus deningeri, Crocuta crocuta intermedia, and steppe rhinoceros. These findings suggest a diverse paleoenvironment.
Human presence
The cave was occupied from the Mousterian to Magdalenian, with possible brief Upper Solutrean use of the Paignon Shelter. In 1974, a Neanderthal jawbone was found, possibly from the Lartet Shelter. In 1988, a child's molar was discovered in locus 12. In 1968, two Homo sapiens skulls from the Gaudry Shelter were dated to Magdalenian V–VI, with a skull fragment from the Paignon Shelter's Magdalenian layer.
Tools and artifacts
Acheulean
Layer 13 yielded flint and pebble tools predating the Riss glaciation, resembling worked pebbles.
Mousterian
The Lartet Shelter produced 3,144 objects, including 402 tools. A paved floor and hearth were found, with another Quina-type hearth in the Tardoire section.
Aurignacian
Layer 5 contains a busked burin and sparse artifacts, indicating limited Aurignacian presence.
Gravettian
Locus 6 yielded 650 objects, including 72 tools and a bone spear point. Middle Gravettian Noailles burins suggest Noaillian/Rayssian facies.
Solutrean
Sparse notched points, similar to those at Placard Cave, provide insufficient evidence for Solutrean occupation.
Magdalenian
Artifacts include scrapers, knives, bone awls, ivory smoothers, and a barbed harpoon. The Paignon Shelter contains a hearth with engraved plaques.
Neolithic
A Neolithic axe blade, bowl, and Bell Beaker vessel with hatched bands were found.
Parietal art
In 1978, a bovid engraving with signs, attributed to Magdalenian Style III, was uncovered on a collapsed block, reflecting symbolic or ritualistic expression.
Portable art
Middle Magdalenian
The Paignon Shelter yielded an engraved sandstone and ornaments, including a bone pendant and a pierced horse incisor with triangle engravings.
Final Magdalenian
In 1886, Eugène Paignon found a bâton percé engraved with seals, salmon, and eels. Other artifacts include engraved ivory, a bone with a horse frieze, and ibex-decorated antler. Perforated shells and antler pieces served as ornaments. These objects suggest advanced artistic and symbolic practices.