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One of the key cardial (or, impressed wear pottery) occurrences exists in the lower Rhône and Ardèche valley of SE France
This site preserves stacked occupation layers, including multiple hearths and typical cardial lithics; as well as ceramics. But it is a rockshelter and river valley people lived and built around.

The site has an inner chamber(s), open porch(s) and river nearby
Archaeologists have recorded discrete occupation layers in mutiple areas. Like floors, hearths, cultural deposits.
Rather than surviving walls and built structures like post and beam; wattle and daub, or stacked stones. That may have been taken down, or perished.
Most archaeological activity has been concentrated on the shelter’s porch and entrance area
Botanical and neolithic syntheses places the open air and rock shelter site within the early cardial or impressed-ware agropastoral economy
Emmer and other hulled wheats figure in the assemblages.
Domestication of sheep and goats; some cattle and pigs. Plus wild game exploitation of deer, aurochs, and large bovids exist here. There are small mammals; and local freshwater/river fish too
Animal bone assemblages indicate hunting and use of animal resources.
Being inland in the Rhône/Ardèche gorge, exploitation of the river and its resources is plausible but no famous preserved fish-trap or boat remains have been announced from the site itself.
Cardial groups were active along Mediterranean coasts, and its believed the overall culture was associated with the coastal movement, and seafaring here
In the bigger picture.
From the concentrations of animal bones, hearth features and special deposits. Archaeologists infer communal food events
Baume d’Oullins shows occupation layers with substantial faunal remains. It’s consistent with repeated communal meals and shared consumption. That said, the site lacks a single monumental “feast hall”. It’s a rockshelter where communal activities would have taken place in the main opening outside, or moving around to the nearby attached structures.
No large, built cult structures are reported
As a natural shelter with water features. Ritual or symbolic activities like music and dance; art; and, funery gestures may haved occured outside.
Interpretations of rituals at rock shelters are generally drawn from special deposits, and treatment of objects rather than from stone temples
With its unique rockshelter cave and river features, including probably neolithic levels, structures, and sequance. Baume d’Oullins is an important element of cardial, or impressed wear potterys spread. Despite whatever name you want to call it (and, how you choose to pronounce it).

Bibliography: Bouby, L., Antolín, F., Martin, L., Rottoli, M., & Jesus, A. (2022). Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France. PLOS ONE
Roudil, J.-L. — the excavations at Baume d’Oullins (1977-1990) including the Neolithic levels C6 & C5.
“Le Cardial–Epicardial Early Neolithic of Lower Rhône Valley (South-Eastern France): A Lithic Perspective.”
“Our prehistoric treasures in the Ardèche” (site web page)
Baume d’Oullins entry in Wikipedia (French)
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