Keep to transmit
The Solutré Prehistory Museum preserves evidence of 350 years of human occupation in Southern Burgundy. The collections mainly come from the prehistoric sites of Solutré, Vergisson and Mâconnais. Since its discovery in 000, the site bears witness to the continuous evolution of research techniques in archaeology, conceptions of Prehistory and its representation from the end of the 1866th century to the present day. Immerse yourself in the heart of the riches of one of the largest open-air deposits in Europe, the eponymous Solutrean site.
©Honoré HugrelCreated in 1987 by the Department of Saône-et-Loire, with the support and participation of the State, the Prehistory Museum The Solutré Museum is more than just a site museum. It brings together the archaeological collections of the Solutré prehistoric site, frequented by human groups since the middle of the last Ice Age, from the Mâconnais region and southern Burgundy, from the Loire Valley to the Saône Valley. Furthermore, the Solutré site is a historical site. witness of the first prehistoric archaeology in France, of the history of Prehistory and of the evolution of research techniques.
True cultural artifacts, the Rock, the site, and its archaeology have often inspired 19th and 20th-century artists. The site has contributed to shaping the image of prehistory in its popular representation, from the first popular science books to school posters of the 1970s, including the very first prehistoric novel written by its first excavator (Adrien Arcelin, signing the novel Solutré or the reindeer hunters of central France under the anagrammatic pseudonym “A. Cranile” in 1872). The silhouette of his rock, its prehistoric inhabitants, and its legendary hunt into the abyss These constituted, for the general public, the first images of times before recorded history…
Where do the collections come from?
En 1986, the Departmental Museum of Prehistory of Solutré in design did not have a collection, a fundamental organ. Three founding deposits were then granted for its creation:
- by the Academy of Mâcon, of which Adrien Arcelin (1838-1904), inventor and first excavator of the site, was for many years President and perpetual secretary,
- by Musée des Ursulines of the City of Mâcon, of which Adrien Arcelin was also curator and to whom he gave his personal collection of objects from the excavations of Solutré and other sites in the Mâconnais,
- by the State, with which the prehistorian Jean Combier (1926-2020), director of the Solutré excavations in the 1970s, was both research director of the CNRS and director of prehistoric antiquities in the Rhône-Alpes region.
Donations and acquisitions
Since 1987, these three founding repositories have been enriched with donations andacquisitions carried out by different curators from the 1990s and 2000s to the present day.
These donations and acquisitions respond to the following thematic axes:
- archaeology prehistory of the site and the Mâconnais,
- witnesses to the scientific history of the site,
- publications relating to the history of the site and its role in the history of Prehistory, as new scientific discipline,
- representations of the site and Prehistory through time (hunting into the abyss, reconstitution of the landscape, sometimes naive), its notoriety being inseparable from its status as a prehistoric station and eponymous site,
- dissemination of knowledge about Prehistory through popular representations and the development of printing,
- Prehistory and contemporary art.
Today, the collections of Prehistory Museum are rich with more than 300 objects of all kinds! Archaeological series from preventive searches carried out on the Archaeological park, tools and remains of prehistoric animals, human remains found on settlement sites, paintings and watercolors representing the site in Prehistory or today, works of graphic art popular representations of Prehistory accompanying the dissemination of knowledge (comics, advertising and educational chromolithographs), bronze sculptures from the end of the 19th century, contemporary paintings, books, magazines and old publications on the Solutré site or on Prehistory, postcards documenting excavations in the 1920s, life-size reconstruction of large extinct carnivores, dermoplasty of a Neanderthal man, metal objects and medieval human remains, ancient stele from Solutré... so many objects that delight the gaze of the curious!

Additional deposits
The creation of the museum, which is also on the eponymous site, led the State to deposit there material from various archaeological excavations in the region:
- the excavations carried out by Jean Combier in Solutré between 1968-1976 on land purchased by the State from Crot du Charnier, supplemented by the elements gathered during his excavations with Bernard Gély and Jean-Louis Porte, in 1987 and 1988, and excavations of theUniversity of Kansas, directed by Anta Montet-White and Jack Hofman in 1997-1998. These series constitute the largest deposit with more than 650 containers. They include most of the fauna and lithic furniture collected in the second half of the XNUMXth century on the site.
- Other deposits complement the collections:
the excavations of the occupations of Varennes-Lès-Mâcon, from the Lower Paleolithic (before 300,000 years ago) to the Epipaleolithic (around 12,000 years ago)
the site's deposit Solutré-Village and the "Sève Hangar", witnesses to the ancient occupations of the Solutré site, dating back more than 50,000 years,
the occupations of Vergisson dating from the end of the Middle Paleolithic period (between 300,000 and 45,000 years ago), including faunal and lithic remains and the Neanderthal human remains from the deposit of paleoanthropologist Silvana Condemi.