Since its discovery, the Chauvet cave elaborate artwork called into question our understanding of Palaeolithic art evolution and challenged traditional chronological benchmarks [Valladas H et al. (2001) Nature 413:419-479]. Chronological approaches revealing human presences in the cavity during the Aurignacian and the Gravettian are indeed still debated on the basis of stylistic criteria [Pettitt P (2008) J Hum Evol 55:908-917]. The presented 36 Cl Cosmic Ray Exposure ages demonstrate that the cliff overhanging the Chauvet cave has collapsed several times since 29 ka until the sealing of the cavity entrance prohibited access to the cave at least 21 ka ago. Remarkably agreeing with the radiocarbon dates of the human and animal occupancy, this study confirms that the Chauvet cave paintings are the oldest and the most elaborate ever discovered, challenging our current knowledge of human cognitive evolution.absolute dating | cosmonuclide | remote sensing | rockart | rockfall C hauvet cave, in Vallon Pont d'Arc, Ardèche, France, is a site of exceptional scientific interest for a number of reasons: (i) the variety of its majestic parietal; (ii) very good conservation of the floor and wall ornamentations, exhibiting human and animal imprints; (iii) revelations of unknown techniques in Palaeolithic rock art (such as stump drawing); (iv) predominance of rare themes such as felines and rhinoceroses; and (v) unequalled aesthetic delivery (1). On the basis of stylistic comparison with known elements, the Chauvet cave rock ornamentations were initially estimated as being Solutrean (22-17 ka BP) and Magdalenian (17-10 ka BP) (2). The first radiocarbon dates ranging from approximately 30 to approximately 32 14 C ka BP (3, 4) thus disagreed with stylistic analyses such as formalized by Leroi-Gouran (5). Although currently confirmed by 82 radiocarbon dating (6, 7), by crossing dating methods (8,9), and supported by the recent discovery of manifestations of sophisticated Aurignacian prehistoric art (40-28 ka BP) in the Swabian Jura (10), it still remains unclear whether the current stylistic framework should be abandoned in favor of radiocarbon chronologies. Additional robust chronological constraints are therefore critical in establishing Chauvet cave as a reliable benchmark in the absence of comparable equivalent (1,11,12). If corroborated by an independent method, the absolute chronological framework of the Chauvet drawings will indeed establish them as the oldest and most elaborate Aurignacian paintings ever discovered. This will furthermore confirm the existence of an already extremely mature art at that time period during which only few elaborate engraving are known (10), but no other paintings (13,14). To fill this knowledge gap, a geomorphological study combined with 36 Cl dating of rockslide surfaces overhanging the cave entrance was conducted.
The Chauvet Cave ClosureGeomorphological studies carried out at Chauvet cave during the last 10 y have unambiguously demonstrated that only one entrance to the cave existed at t...