In the cold sweep of the Upper Paleolithic, the Gravettian technical and social package spread across much of Europe. In southwestern France, archaeological deposits at Fournol (Occitanie, Lot Department), La Rochette (Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Dordogne, Sarlat-la-Canéda) and the Ormesson (Les Bossats) locality contain stone-tool types—small backed bladelets and characteristic Gravette points—alongside hearths and osseous tools that anchor human presence between roughly 31,822 and 25,490 calibrated BCE.
These sites present a cinematic landscape: seasonal camps on river terraces, low shelters, and camps organized around hunting and marrow processing. Archaeological data indicates connections to wider Gravettian networks of raw-material exchange and stylistic traditions in portable art and personal ornamentation, though preservation varies between locales. The three human remains sampled here come from distinct contexts within this broader cultural horizon and provide rare windows into population composition during a dynamic phase of Ice Age Europe.
Limited evidence suggests these are part of a diverse population linked to long-lived Upper Paleolithic lineages rather than a tightly bounded local group. Radiocarbon dates and stratigraphic associations are consistent with classic Gravettian chronology, but with only three genomic samples the picture remains fragmentary.