Les explorateurs de la Préhistoire

As a child, did you dig in the garden hoping to find treasure ? Is Indiana Jones your favorite adventure hero? Everyone has an idea of the archaeologist's work, without knowing the truth.

A permanent exhibition designed for children and families

Open to the public since September 2015, Les explorateurs de la Préhistoire exhibition was created by the Gargas Caves guides for the children's public (families and schools). The exhibition lets you learn and understand by playing archaeologist.

For the pleasure of the eye, but also in the interests of science, the exhibition features the reconstruction of a life-size prehistoric camp. The question is simple : what would have remained thousands of years later, if the camp had been hastily abandoned ?

This is the beginning of a real dig. Armed with the tools of the archaeologist (paintbrush, shovel, bucket, notebook), children can unearth the remains of the camp and conduct a scientific investigation into the history of the site and its inhabitants.


Four laboratories are at their disposal to make the objects they find speak for themselves:


The archaeologist : the site manager
The anthropologist : specialist in human beings.
The archaeozoologist : the expert on animal remains.
The tool specialist : in the know about tools and their functions.

Les explorateurs de la préhistoire

Using animated films, tactile games, objects to manipulate and copies of prehistoric artefacts, these laboratories not only provide answers to the inquiry, but also enable visitors to discover the little-known professions of archaeology and understand what they have contributed to our knowledge of the Gargas caves.

The prehistoric camp

It allows us to imagine what a prehistoric habitat might have been like.

Composed of two living quarters, a tepee and a rock shelter, this reproduction of a prehistoric family's living quarters features objects used in daily life: a smoker, assegais, a kettle, a necklace, and tools made of flint, bone and reindeer antler…

The digging table

Opposite the camp, a 4m-long excavation area, divided into 16 squares, will reveal the remains of the camp as we would find them today. This is where the investigation begins for the apprentice archaeologists. They have to record their discoveries in an excavation notebook, and are then invited to make them speak using the laboratories at their disposal.

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