Replica of Lascaux cave paintings at the International Centre for Cave Art in Montignac, France
© Caroline Blumberg/Epa/Shutterstoc
'The Sistine Chapel of Prehistory'. Venture into a prehistoric gallery of art
In fall of 1940, a group of boys exploring the outdoors near Dordogne in southwestern France came upon the entrance to a cave--and unwittingly discovered treasure trove of prehistoric art. The caves known as Lascaux are covered with hundreds of images–giant drawings of bulls, horses, and humans–created some 20,000 years ago, in the Upper Paleolithic period. The caverns, a World Heritage site, were opened to the public for many years, until scientists observed that the 1,200 visitors who were exploring the caves each day were adding carbon dioxide (from their breath), heat, humidity, and other contaminants to the air that were damaging the artwork. To protect these prehistoric masterpieces, the cave has been closed to the public since 1963. Today, the closest you can get is viewing the full-scale replicas at the nearby International Centre for Cave Art in Montignac, France, where our homepage image was photographed.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Landmark Center clock tower and Winter Carnival Ice Palace in St. Paul, Minnesota
For Waitangi Day, the Pancake Rocks on New Zealand’s South Island
Meditation domes at the Beatles Ashram in Rishikesh, India
'El Problema del Caballo' by Claudia Fontes in Venice, Italy
A carving of artist W.O.J. Nieuwenkamp in the Pura Meduwe Karang temple in Bali, Indonesia
Sandcastle on Malvarrosa Beach in Valencia, Spain
An old farm in the Shetland Islands, Scotland
At the Arch of Septimius Severus in the Roman Forum for the ides of March