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Article Dans Une Revue Archaeological Prospection Année : 2015

A geophysical tool for the conservation of a decorated cave : a case study for the Lascaux Cave

Résumé

The Lascaux Cave, located in the south-eastern part of the department of the Dordogne (24, France), is considered to be one of the most important prehistoric caves in the world. The scope of this study is the protection and conservation of the Lascaux paintings from a hydrogeological and climatic environmental standpoint. Geophysical methods enable us to monitor the environment of the decorated cave in a non-invasive way. Electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) using a pole–dipole array, together with analysis of the local effective rainfall (groundwater recharge) and the flow in the cave, helps us to identify an area where upstream underground water is probably stored e.g. a recharge zone. There is a relationship between resistivity change in this zone and the underground flow measured in the cave, but with a time lag. Thus systematic electrical surveys following rainy periods could be used to predict the beginning of the underground flow and in so doing provide valuable advice for the preservation of the Lascaux Cave

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Dates et versions

hal-01842631 , version 1 (18-07-2018)

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Shan Xu, Colette Sirieix, Catherine Ferrier, Delphine Lacanette-Puyo, Joëlle Riss, et al.. A geophysical tool for the conservation of a decorated cave : a case study for the Lascaux Cave. Archaeological Prospection, 2015, 22 (4), pp.283-292. ⟨10.1002/arp.1513⟩. ⟨hal-01842631⟩
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