Prehistory in the Languedoc Roussillon & Midi-Pyrénées
The first finds here in Occitania are many millions of years old, when dinosaurs roamed the earth. But also ancient caves and sites from the era of the 450.000 year old Tautavel man (the first European) and the Cro Magnon (Magdalenien - 15.000 years old) are found here. And finally, the Celts with their cromlechs, dolmens and menhirs, who inhabited this area thousands of years ago. Come and explore this ancient past and join us on one of our prehistoric tours! panoccitania.com/excursions.html
Ouverture musée préhistorique de Nemours
28 mars 1981
A Nemours, le musée de la préhistoire en Ile de France, construit par Roland SIMOUNET, vient d'ouvrir ses portes au public. Visite des salles qui reconstituent chronologiquement la vie quotidienne des hommes préhistoriques dans la région. Interview du conservateur, Jean Bernard ROY sur le moulage du site de Pincevent et sur différents objets. La présentation s'arrête aux Gaulois. Images d'archive INA
Institut National de l'Audiovisuel
Abonnez-vous Abonnez-vous #INA #Société
Corruption : Just an Illusion ?
Corrupt Legislation (1896) by Elihu Vedder. Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C.
Photo of reconstruction of the skull of the Man of Tautavel, Museum of Prehistoric, Nemours, France
Vidéo de présentation du Musée National de Préhistoire
Vidéo présentant le Musée National de Préhistoire situé aux Eyzies-de-Tayac.
RMN - GP / PWP 2014
Cap Sud-Ouest - Le musée de la préhistoire des Eyzies
French students find human tooth which is at least 550,000 years old
Two young archeological volunteers have uncovered the oldest human fragment ever found in France – an adult tooth which is at least 550,000 years old.
The tooth, found last week at Tautavel in the eastern French Pyrenees, could provide an important missing piece in the jigsaw of knowledge about early human settlement of Europe.
The oldest human body part ever found in Europe, a jawbone uncovered in Germany in 1907, was 600,000 years old. The oldest human remains previously found in France were 450,000 years old.
The tooth, an adult incisor, was found by two teenaged volunteers during a dig at the Caune de l’Arago caves at Tautavel near Perpignan. The site is already celebrated as the home of “Tautavel Man”, a 450,000 years old Homo Erectus discovered in 1969.
Le musée de l'homme de Néandertal
La Chapelle aux Saints
EXPOSITION. L'homme de Neandertal, si loin, si proche
Le musée de Préhistoire de Nemours brosse son portrait en exposant un grand nombre d'objets de fouilles. Une expo que Sciences et Avenir a visité pour vous. Plus d'infos sur
Homo erectus | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:03:47 1 Discovery and type specimen
00:07:46 2 Origin and dispersal
00:09:24 2.1 Africa
00:11:19 2.2 Eurasia
00:11:28 2.2.1 Caucasus
00:14:24 2.2.2 East and Southeast Asia
00:16:54 2.2.3 Europe
00:18:51 3 Taxonomy
00:26:14 4 Habitat
00:27:02 5 Behaviour
00:27:11 5.1 Tool use
00:28:59 5.2 Use of fire
00:31:40 5.3 Engravings and religion
00:32:57 5.4 Sociality
00:34:51 6 Descendants and subspecies
00:35:32 6.1 iHomo erectus/i
00:37:06 6.2 Related species
00:38:40 7 Fossils
00:39:31 7.1 Individual fossils
00:40:34 8 Gallery
00:40:43 9 See also
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Speaking Rate: 0.9289033448508585
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-B
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Homo erectus (meaning 'upright man') is a species of archaic humans that lived throughout most of the Pleistocene geological epoch.
Early fossil evidence for homo erectus was discovered with specimens dating from roughly 1.8 million years ago (discovered 1991 in Dmanisi, Georgia), in Hubei, China (min 2.15 Ma), Yuanmou, China in 2008 (dated to 1.7 Ma), in Gongwangling, China dated to 1.63 Ma (2015), along with stone tools from 2.1 million years ago (discovered 2018 in the Loess Plateau, China) created by an as yet unconfirmed hominin species.H. erectus has been hypothesized as a direct ancestor of the later hominins including Homo heidelbergensis, Homo antecessor, Homo neanderthalensis, Homo denisova, and Homo sapiens.A debate regarding the classification, ancestry, and progeny of H. erectus, especially in relation to Homo ergaster, is ongoing, with two major positions:
1) H. erectus is the same species as African H. ergaster; or,
2) it is in fact an Asian species or subspecies distinct from African H. ergaster, with some arguing that that H. erectus would later undergo back-migration to Africa, where it would evolve eventually into modern homo sapiens, and others proposing that the African species, H. ergaster, might ultimately have evolved into modern Homo sapiens in Africa, with Asian H. erectus eventually going extinct.Some paleoanthropologists consider H. ergaster to be a variety, that is, the African variety, of H. erectus; the labels Homo erectus sensu stricto (strict sense) for the Asian species and Homo erectus sensu lato (broad sense) have been offered for the greater species comprising both Asian and African populations.H. erectus eventually became extinct throughout its range in Africa, Europe and Asia, but developed into derived species, notably Homo heidelbergensis.
As a chronospecies, the time of its disappearance is thus a matter of contention. The species name proposed in 1950
defines Java Man as the type specimen (now H. e. erectus). Since then, there has been a trend in palaeoanthropology of reducing the number of proposed species of Homo, to the point where H. erectus includes all
early (Lower Paleolithic) forms of Homo sufficiently derived from H. habilis and
distinct from early H. heidelbergensis (in Africa also known as H. rhodesiensis). In this wider sense, H. erectus had mostly been replaced by H. heidelbergensis by about 300,000 years ago, with possible late survival of H. erectus soloensis in Java as late as 70,000 years ago, or up to 550,000 years ago.The discovery of the morphologically divergent Dmanisi skull 5 in 2013 has reinforced the trend of subsuming fossils formerly given separate species names under H. erectus considered as a wide-ranging, polymorphous species. Thus, H. ergaster is now well within the accepted morphological range of H. erectus, and it has been suggested that even H. rudolfensis and H. habilis (alternatively suggested as late forms of Australopithecus rather than early Homo)
should be considered early varieties of H. erectus.
Prehistory of France | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Prehistory of France
00:00:23 1 The Palaeolithic
00:00:32 1.1 Lower Palaeolithic
00:01:47 1.2 Middle Palaeolithic
00:02:43 1.3 Upper Palaeolithic
00:05:06 2 The Mesolithic
00:06:22 3 The Neolithic
00:08:58 4 The Copper Age
00:10:31 5 The Bronze Age
00:11:39 6 The Iron Age
00:13:13 7 Timeline
00:18:41 8 See also
00:19:13 9 Sources and citations
00:19:22 10 External links
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
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The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Prehistoric France is the period in the human occupation (including early hominins) of the geographical area covered by present-day France which extended through prehistory and ended in the Iron Age with the Celtic La Tène culture.
Stone tools indicate that early humans were present in France at least 1.57 million years ago.
Paleolithic Europe
Paleolithic Europe refers to the Paleolithic period of Europe, a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of the first stone tools and which covers roughly 99% of human technological history. It extends from the introduction of stone tools by hominids 1.8 million years ago, to the introduction of agriculture and the end of the Pleistocene around 12,000 BP.
It is believed that Homo erectus evolved into Homo heidelbergensis and subsequently Homo neanderthalensis in Paleolithic Europe, before being replaced by modern humans migrating out of Africa approximately 50,000 years ago. The bones of the earliest Europeans are found in Dmanisi, Georgia, and are 1.8 million years old. The oldest evidence of human occupation in Eastern Europe comes from the Kozarnika cave in Bulgaria where a single human tooth and flint artifacts have been dated to at least 1.4 million years ago. In Western Europe at Atapuerca in Spain, human remains have been found that are from 1.2 million years ago The earliest appearance of European early modern humans has been dated to 43,000 years ago from a tooth found in the Grotta del Cavallo in Italy in 1969.
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Lower Palaeolithic Quartzite tools Handaxes,Cleavers,Choppers etc
This video clip shows a selection of quartzite tools found on this site.They are not a local resource and were probably brought here by Colnian Man whenever he lived.I also have TWO examples of massive,over 100 kilo anvil shaped tree felling tools in quartzite with sturdy chisel ends and these must have been carried here possibly by boat (ALL the necessary tools for boatbuilding are in this assemblage from adzes,wedges and large choppers ,hafted axes to smaller borers,piercers etc PLUS the evidence of the Stone Map I have,(see website) which charts the rivers,lakes and coastlines of Europe and Africa and could ONLY have been made by traveling by some sort of watercraft.
Back to these artefacts now,note how most have the flat butt (striking platform),well tapered points and older cortex where they are held.
Quartzite is a much less brittle material,much tougher than flint,it is denser and would be used for more heavy duty work such as treefelling,butchery and of course,making flint tools.Many of the quartzite tools,particularly the anvil shaped tree fellers,have cupholes on the top,similiar to nut holes used by birds and monkeys to crack nuts and could have been used to hold flint into place whilst striking into form.
These tools are remarkeably similiar to those made by Homo Erectus in Africa well over a million years ago and I have seen similiar tools at Tautavel in France dated at around 900,000 years old which leads me to believe that Colnian Man was a European descendent of H.Erectus although named Homo Antecessor from remains found in Spain at Atapuerca from around that date.
I also have many,many Mode 1 type tools but they are not very distinct and easily dismissed and will only be validated when found in situ in the future when technical data will confirm their age.Bring it on!
see website colnianman.com
All these clips are of artefacts from the same collection in the Pleistocene Thames valley,now the Colne Valley Herts.
Musée National de Préhistoire
Le Musée national de Préhistoire est un établissement fondé en 1918 par Denis Peyrony sur la commune des Eyzies-de-Tayac en Dordogne dans ce qui fut précédemment le château de Tayac.More info visit
musee national de prehistoire,
musée de la préhistoire quinson,
musée de la préhistoire nemours,
musée de la préhistoire vassieux,
musée de la préhistoire sciez,
musée de la préhistoire tautavel,
Elisabeth Daynes Paris
Solo exhibitions :
- « La vérité des visages » - Studio Daynès – June 2015 – Paris, France
- « Humans » - Gallery Jean-François Cazeau – October 10-27, 2015 - Paris, France
- « Curieux face-à-face » - Gallery Dupré & Dupré – Dec. 9, 2015 – January 9, 2016 – Béziers, France
Born in Beziers (France) in 1960, Elisabeth Daynès lives and works in Paris. In the early stages of her career in theatre, when she worked as a prosthetic make-up artist with stage director Matthias Langhoff, she was fascinated by the question of identity and metamorphosis. From the 1990s, this passion led her to painstakingly recreate the bodies of prehistoric hominids, based on the most advanced scientific knowledge. She thus became a world-renowned paleo-artist notably with her reconstructions of fossil hominids for the Museum of Tautavel or her recreation of the Australopithecus Lucy in 1999 for the Field Museum in Chicago. In 2006, her reconstruction of Pharaoh Tutankhamen’s face put her on the cover of every edition of National Geographic. In 2010, she was awarded the John J. Lanzendorf PaleoArt Prize. In 2011, the Ile-de-France Museum of Prehistory devoted a solo exhibition to her work, while a number of her sculptures of hominids were inaugurated in South Korea.
Using her work on human origins, Elisabeth Daynès now invites the public to reflect on appearance and the human face, today and in the future.
She wishes to show that in a time of social networks and ubiquitous images, everyone is free to invent endless narcissistic mirrors: boundaries blur between real and virtual and between artificial and natural. Her work demonstrates that in the future as well as in the past, we are not the apex of evolution nor are we the only possible humanity. We were once diverse and we again become diverse. Her art constantly plays with science since science feeds much of our imagination. Both take us on a voyage through time. By greatly varying size, material and treatment while playing with and recomposing the subject of the skull, she shows us all the faces that we might have had, and that we will have one day, if that is our choice as artists.
FR1 Culture: Les grottes de Lascaux
FR1 Culture: Les grottes de Lascaux
Niaux, Prähistorik Park: FRANKREICH – im Süden, das reiche Erbe einer sehr bewegten Epoche, Teil 3
FRANKREICH – im Süden, das reiche Erbe einer sehr bewegten Epoche, Teil 3
Aus der Reihe “Kulturreisen individuell”
Laufzeit ca. 90 Minuten
Lastours, Carcassone, Béziers Museum, Gruissan, Fort de Salses, Collioure, St-André-de-Sorède, St-Genis des Fontaines, Santa Maria del Vilar, Prats-de-Mollo-la Preste, Collada de Tosses, Llìvia, Odeillo, Llo, Mont-Louis, Eus, Tautavel Museum, Château de Quéribus, Château de Peyrepertuse, Gorges de Galamus, Ermitage St-Antoine, Musée des Dinosaures Espéraza, Montségur, Route des Corniches, Niaux, Grotte de la Vache, Foix, Parc de la Préhistoire, Grotte du Mas-d’Azil, St-Lizier, St-Gaudens, Pass Col du Tourmalet, Gèdre, Cirque de Troumouse, Lescar, Hendaye, St-Jean-de-Luz, Bidart, Biarritz
Ausführliche Information und viele Bilder aus den Filmen:
wimmer-kommunikation.de
克洛德•亚历山大,法国天才的缩影,他的车间,博物馆,商店 Alexandre, son musée en France
德拉宫微型和西洋镜
劳卡马杜尔在一个特殊的地方在法国明年地段,仔细看看!
坐落在山顶的村庄区域中使46350,在赛道上的奇迹,在历史悠久的房子,在17世纪路易十四(1682)建一个驿站,这个地方邀请您到魔术和梦想!
研讨会
克劳德•亚历山大,炼金术士的缩影(一个主高士法国的缩影),介绍了如何使一个神奇的金属(它融化在开水),或把铅变成金子吗?和许多其他的事情,他和他的激情,游客超过30年
他的专长经常被列为自2010年以来,他的杰出成就生活文化遗产。
博物馆
这个地方的独特之处是,所有的人都只有54毫米高。
该博物馆创建的好奇心,难怪,甚至下降到微型上演成年子女与1:32的比例在18西洋镜
这家商店
商店完成您的光临。有1000多名袖珍俑在我们的车间。
参观为整个家庭!
Les Musées et lieux les plus visités en France et dans le monde Louvre d'0rsay Carnavalet Grévin cire Lens Rodin quai Branly Mer des Civilisations vivant du cheval vie romantique hergé des blindées Gustave Moreau de Tautavel de la grande Guerre des arts forains de l'Armée des invalides du Luxembourg Bourdelle des troupes de la Marine des arts et métiers Toulouse-Lautrec de la Légion des Augustins Napoléonien Trianon Hameau de la Reine Guimet Compiègne de L'Emperie de l'Empire de l'Homme Napoléon 1er la tour Eiffel l'Abbaye du Mont saint Michel arc de Triomphe château de Versailles hôtel des Invalides Notre dame de Paris Sacre Waterloo ville d'art et d'histoire de l'orangerie des Tuilerie, tradition populaire Malmaison Bonaparte saint Elène Elbe guerre et paix Ile d'Aix préhistoire,aux Eyzies- de-Trayac art décoratif ateliers du Carrousel musique plan et relief cinéma palais de Chaillot spectacle Opéra Cabinet des Médailles découverte national de l'Education Technique Monnaie de Paris Légion d'Honneur Ordre de Chevalerie Libération poste, radio France Mode Costume Victor Hugo Balzac Condé Chantilly Marmottan Claude Monet Giverny Louis Pasteur centre Pompidou beaux- arts de l'Ontario Royal Belgique Metz Montréal disneyland jardin des plantes cité des Sciences et de Industrie futurroscope parc Astérix Puy du Fou arc de Triomphe Galeries National du Grand Palais Cimetière Amèricain d'Omaha Sainte Chapelle Ile de la Cité Duc de Bretagne Patrimoine Mondial de l'Unesco Albi Carcassonne Toulouse Avignon Citadelle Vauban Châteaux de la Loire Bordeaux Grand Site de France Pèlerinage de Lourdes Pont du Gard Haut- Koenigsgourg Viaduc de Millau Garabit parc d'Attraction Miniature Vulcania Walibi Aquarim la Rochelle
Visite de Riez et du musée de la préhistoire de Quinson
28 octobre 2015
Expo Signes de Richesse Inégalités au Néolithique (Version les Eyzies)
Un week-end en Préhistoire - 2012 - S. Quertelet.mpg
Intervention du responsable du musée de Solutré-Pouilly (71), Sylvain Quertelet, lors du festival d'archéologie, Un week-end en Préhistoire. Celui-ci s'est déroulé le 17 juin 2012 à Saint Germain-en-Laye. Le thème de discussion concernait la Préhistoire au cinéma.