L
LA MICOQUE
Christopher E. Miller
Institute for Archaeological Sciences, Senckenberg Centre
for Human Evolution and Paleoenvironment, University
of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
La Micoque is a Paleolithic site located in the Dordogne
region of southwestern France. The site is well known
for its Acheulian and particularly its Middle Paleolithic
artifacts. The site lends its name to the Micoquian industry
of stone tools.
Situated along the left bank of the Manaurie valley,
500 m from its confluence with the Vézère River, La
Micoque sits below a cliff of Coniacian limestone
(Late Cretaceous). The site was first discovered in 1895
by the landowner and subsequently excavated by Chauvet
and Rivière in 1896, Capitan in 1896, Harlé in 1897,
Peyrony in 1898 and 1929–1932, Coutil in 1903–1905,
Cartailhac in 1905, and Hauser in 1906–1907. Bordes
excavated the site in 1956, and it was most recently
investigated by Debénath and Rigaud between 1983
and 1996.
The lowest cultural layers contain the transition from
Acheulian to Mousterian industries (the so-called
Tayacian), which has been dated by Electron Spin
Resonance (ESR) on horse teeth to between 241
15 and 288 10 ka (Schwarcz and Grün, 1988). The site
also contains small, elongated, bifacially worked hand
axes, known as Micoquian-type hand axes, in addition to
scrapers with quina retouch and Mousterian points.
Capitan and Hauser were the first excavators to
describe the stratigraphy (Capitan, 1896); however, the
stratigraphic system of Peyrony, first established in
1933, has become the standard for the site (Peyrony,
1938). He defined several horizontal layers, starting with
A at the base and finishing with M at the top. He identified
layers with angular limestone clasts as e ´boulis (rock scree
or talus) and layers with rounded cobbles as having
a fluvial origin. Breuil (1938) criticized Peyrony’s inter-
pretation of the rounded cobbles and suggested that their
rounding was a result of cryoclastism related to
cryoturbation and solifluction. Bordes, Laville, and
Rigaud adopted this interpretation and suggested that the
deposits formed within a rock-shelter, whose roof no lon-
ger exists (Laville, 1973, 197–226). La Micoque became
a key site for the development of Laville’s climatostra-
tigraphic synthesis of cave and rock-shelter sequences in
southwestern France. At La Micoque and other sites, he
interpreted the e ´boulis layers as representing cold, glacial
periods and the reddish sandy-clay layers as representing
in situ formation of soils during interstadials and
interglacials.
Texier, in a recent reassessment of site formation
processes at La Micoque (2009), questions most of the
previous interpretations. Like Peyrony, he argues, based
on sedimentological data, that the majority of the site
was formed by fluvial action, as indicated by rounded
grains and cobbles, graded bedding, and cross-
stratification. Some diamictic layers, formed by
colluvation, originated from the limestone cliff backing
the site. Taken together, the geoarchaeological evidence
strongly suggests that La Micoque is not a former rock-
shelter, but rather the remnant of a former fluvial terrace
of the Manaurie River, now a small stream.
Bibliography
Breuil, H., 1938. Des causes de fracture du silex et du pseudo-roulis
des pierres calcaires dans des couches résiduelles de La Micoque
et autres lieux. Bulletin de la Socie ´te ´ pre ´historique de France,
35(6), 283–288.
Capitan, L., 1896. La station acheuléenne de la Micoque
(Dordogne). Bulletins de la Socie ´te ´d’anthropologie de Paris,
7(7), 529–532.
A.S. Gilbert (ed.), Encyclopedia of Geoarchaeology, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4020-4409-0,
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2017