There’s a crumple France where no humans had been in 26,000 years. The walls are jam-packed with fantastic, perfectly-preserved paintings of animals, ending in a chamber packed with monsters 1312-feet underground, where CO2 and radon gas concentrations provoke hallucinations.
It’s called the the Chauvet-Pont-d’Arc Cave , an incredibly weird and mysterious place. The walls contain hundreds of animals-like the common Paleolithic horses and bisons-but some of them usually are not presupposed to be there, like lions, panthers, rhinos and hyenas.
A few aren’t even alleged to exist, like weird butterflyish animals or chimerical figures half bison half woman. These could be linked to the hallucinations. The trip is such that some archeologists think that it had a ritual nature, with people transcending into a new state as they descended into the overall room.
In fact, the paintings themselves are of such sophistication-some even have three-dimensional relief-which is hard to believe they were made back then. However, radiocarbon dating shows that these paintings are indeed prehistoric: a bunch was made around 27,000-26,000 years ago and the opposite at 32,000-30,000 years ago.
The cave first discovered in 1994 by three French speleologists: Eliette Brunel-Deschamps, Christian Hillaire, and Jean-Marie Chauvet. And now you’ll be able to visit it too. Not in person, but inside the next neatest thing: The good German film director Werner Herzog has made a 3D film of it, that is the simplest 3D film I would like to observe this year (actually, amazing documentaries are probably the single movie genre it truly is perfect for 3D, like this or the Hubble 3D movie ).
NPD: Apple grabs over 1 / 4 of the mobile PC business in Q4 2011 (including iPads), HP tops with laptops
Hauppauge Broadway review



