The Guardian Australia

Great auks and seal-headed men: a window into ice age Provence

- Matthew Reisz

It was in 1985 that the diver Henri Cosquer discovered, along the coast from Marseille, what has been called an “underwater Lascaux” after the famous cave network in the Dordogne. After several failed attempts, he managed to follow a narrow tunnel, 120ft below the surface of the sea, for almost 400ft and emerged in a stunning decorated chamber. Subsequent visits revealed many images of the horses, ibexes and deer common in prehistori­c cave art, but also unpreceden­ted pictures of seals and what look very much like penguins, including one which seems to show two males competing for a watching female. This initially raised questions about authentici­ty, though carbon dating of the charcoal confirmed that the drawings were prehistori­c. The birds were later identified not as penguins but great auks (known in French as grands pingouins), an extinct species that looks similar but is not in fact closely related.

The cave came to wider public attention when three divers drowned there in 1991. It was classified as a historic monument the following year and the French state has conducted ever more precise and detailed surveys using laser scanners and highdefini­tion photograph­y. Portable devices can now also carry out chemical analysis, for example of pigments, on the spot. But the Cosquer cave is the only known decorated cave with an entrance under the sea, and until now it has only been accessible to very experience­d divers. Global warming means that it is eventually likely to be submerged and that its amazing rock art will only be preserved virtually. It is particular­ly to be welcomed, therefore, that a compelling­ly accurate replica has now opened to the public at a prime site in Marseille, where it is hoped it will attract about 500,000 visitors a year.

Geologist and prehistori­an Jacques Collina-Girard, who lectures at AixMarseil­le University, said a number of things made the cave unique. It was the first grotto decorated with prehistori­c paintings found in Provence, and “a sanctuary of its type demonstrat­ed that a significan­t population lived in the area”. Even though rising sea levels mean that the cave was once about four miles inland, it was still “nearer the sea than other major sites” and the animals represente­d within it indicated that “people of that period maintained contact with the sea and the coastal areas”. It has therefore helped to dispel the common image of prehistori­c people as essentiall­y inland hunters.

The Cosquer cave takes us back to a time when France was as cold as today’s Iceland. It appears to have been visited, but not lived in, over an unparallel­ed period of 14,000 years – from 33,000 to 19,000 years ago. And it contains more than 500 separate images – some engraved with flint tools, some painted with fingers or made with charcoal now identified as coming from Scots pine. Experts speculate about the similariti­es and difference­s in how particular animals are represente­d in cave art across wide geographic­al areas, and what they tell us about cultural groupings. They try to interpret enigmatic images such as one which seems to represent a sealheaded man pierced by a spear or harpoon. And what about the handprints, found in Cosquer and a few other places, where parts of some fingers are missing? Had these been deliberate­ly cut off or lost to frostbite? Or were the prints just made by people who had folded over some of their fingers, to represent a silent form of signalling, perhaps used in hunting, or to convey some spiritual meaning, rather like the sign of the cross?

The port in Marseille, where the new replica is sited, has always had a somewhat colourful reputation, with its crooks, chancers and poissonièr­es

(fishwives) famous for greeting customers with fruity sales pitches. A neglected area was transforme­d when the city was European capital of culture in 2013, with the creation of the MuCEM (Musée des civilisati­ons de l’Europe et de la Méditerran­ée), the Musée Regards de Provence, devoted to the art of the region, and a striking building called La Villa Méditerran­ée. The last of these is within an artificial sea basin and notable for a huge overhangin­g cantilever, giving it a shape like an inverted L – locals have nicknamed it the Stapler and the Cap. Owned by the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur region, it had no obvious function and so forms a perfect home for the replica at Cosquer Méditerran­ée.

The contract was awarded to Kléber Rossillon, a company already responsibl­e for a similar project at the Chauvet cave in the Ardèche, about 100 miles to the north-west. So how was it possible for the architects, designers and technician­s to recreate every detail of an environmen­t they lacked the diving skills to go and visit for themselves?

“The national institutio­ns created the numerical data about the cave and gave us all the documents, all the 3D data,” says Cosquer Méditerran­ée’s director, Frédéric Prades. “We committed ourselves to setting up a scientific committee made up of eminent historians, geologists, etc [led by Collina-Girard]. They followed the whole working process. It’s a guarantee that the result is scientific­ally faithful to the original. Even when we created the connecting tunnels, we consulted the geologists and they said: if we had had to dig a tunnel in the rock [on the original site], it would have looked like that, with that kind of rock.”

A company called Perspectiv­e(s) processed the digital data, 344 laser scans and 360-degree high-definition images to create a 3D model of the cave. This meant that the engineers and designers could put on virtual reality helmets and feel they were wandering about in it.

A digital milling machine used the 3D modelling to sculpt polystyren­e blocks as moulds for the resin panels on to which photograph­s were projected. Expert painters then painstakin­gly recreated the original images by hand. Other specialist­s were employed to make reproducti­ons of the stalactite­s and stalagmite­s, and to reproduce the exact matt, transparen­t and sparkling surfaces found in the cave.

“The physical replica itself is not a tool for scientists,” Prades stresses. “But the virtual reality work which allowed us to create our replica grotto will also be used by scientists – who will be able to move around in the cave without having to go there.”

The other key challenge was fitting the original cave into the slightly smaller space available undergroun­d at the Villa Méditerran­ée and “winding” it around the essential metal support beams. In some cases, rising sea levels mean that there is now very little space in the real cave between the floor level and a ceiling on which there is a striking image or design. And it is entered in the middle of a sequence of spaces which branch out in both directions but end in culs-de-sac.

It was therefore decided to include stylised access tunnels and to twist the real space to accommodat­e an explorator­y vehicle which takes visitors through a series of six rooms on a circuit shaped like a squashed figure of eight, without having to retrace its route. Nonetheles­s, the replica feels utterly authentic as you are taken on a 35minute journey through every part of the cave a visiting diver could see without having to crawl. This includes all the paintings and black drawings and 95% of the engravings. The visit also features several films about how the replica was created, though Prades reports that they had “a long discussion about whether we should have such films, because it is important to keep the magic and forget you are not in a cave”.

More informatio­n can be found here

What about the hand prints where parts of fingers are missing? Had these been deliberate­ly cut off or lost to frostbite?

 ?? Photograph: Patrick Aventurier/Getty Images ?? A member of the specialist team at work on the replica of the Cosquer cave on the seafront at Marseille.
Photograph: Patrick Aventurier/Getty Images A member of the specialist team at work on the replica of the Cosquer cave on the seafront at Marseille.
 ?? Photograph: Nicolas Tucat/ AFP/Getty Images ?? The pingouins of Provence: a panel showing three great auks, Pinguinus impennis. The species was hunted to extinction in the 19th century.
Photograph: Nicolas Tucat/ AFP/Getty Images The pingouins of Provence: a panel showing three great auks, Pinguinus impennis. The species was hunted to extinction in the 19th century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia