Cro-Magnon is one of the most famous archeological sites in the World, but few scholars are aware that the human remains from this shelter have been commingled since 1868 and that only one comprehensive attempt to reassociate the bones has been published, more than fifty years ago. The aim of this article is to present the results of a multiproxy approach applied in order to reassociate the main bones of the lower limbs (including the pelvis) of the adults from Cro-Magnon. We used a classical approach (i.e. the study of size, morphology, and surface alterations of the bones), combined with tools from virtual anthropology, namely maximum length estimations, virtual test of morphometrical similarities between possible pairs, virtual test of articular congruence, and visual comparisons of cortical thickness of long bones. From the 26 bones from the lower limb under This discovery quickly led to excavations in or around the shelter and, in less than 50 years, it was emptied (Henry-Gambier, et al., 2013a). However these "excavations" did not produced any useful documentation on the stratigraphy of the site, and the main data were those provided by Lartet in 1868 (Henry-Gambier, et al., 2013a). Artifacts associated with the Aurignacian, the Gravettian and the Solutrean cultures were identified at Cro-Magnon (Henry-Gambier, et al., 2013a). The human remains were for long time considered as dating from the Early Aurignacian but it has been demonstrated that they are most likely associated with the Early phase of the Gravettian (33-31000 Cal. BP) (Henry-Gambier, 2002, Henry-Gambier, et al., 2013a) 1 .