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Boat graveyard at Kerhervy, Lanester, Morbihan, France (47°47’ N, 3°17’ W).Information centre about Auvergne, natural park in Aydat, Puy-de-Dôme, France (45°40’ N, 2°58’ E).Puy de Côme in the Chaîne des Puys, Puy-de-Dôme, France  (45°47’ N, 2°57’ E).
Church of Fixey, Fixin, Côte d’Or, France (47°15’ N, 4°58’ E).Golf course of the Domaine de Sperone near Bonifacio, Corse-du-Sud, France (41°22’ N, 9°13’ E).Olive harvest near Les Baux-de-Provence, Côte d’Azur, France (43°44’ N, 4°47 ’E).
German bunker of the Atlantic Wall near Royan, Charente-Maritime, France (45°40’ N, 1°08’ W).Beauduc lighthouse, Camargue, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (43°22’ N, 4°35’ E).Ratonneau island, Frioul archipelago, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (43°17’ N, 5°19’ E).
Sainte-Foy abbey church in Conques, Aveyron, France (44°36’ N, 2°24’ E).Molène island, Finistère, France (48°24’ N, 4°57’ W).Aligre market, 12th arrondissement of Paris, France (48°51’ N, 2°23’ E).
Burnt forest near Valensole, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France (43°49’ N, 5°59’ E).Walled city of Saint Malo, Ile-et-Vilaine, France (48°39’ N, 2°02’ W).Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry, airport and railway station near Lyon, Rhône, France (45°43’ N, 5°05’ E).
Centre Georges Pompidou (Centre Beaubourg), Paris, France (48°51’ N, 2°21’ E).Harvest in the Beauce, France (48°21’ N, 1°23’ E).Wine harvest in Cahors, Lot, France (44°26’ N, 1°16’ E).
Harvest in the Beaujolais, Rhône, France (45°58’ N, 4°32’E).The marshes of Bourges, Bourges, Cher, France (47°05’ N, 2°25’ E).Salt marshes of Guerande, Loire-Atlantique, France (47°19’ N, 2°27’ W).
Catamaran in the Glénan archipelago, Finistère, France (47°44’ N, 4°00’ W).Flock of sheep, Puy de Dôme, Auvergne, France (45°47’ N, 2°56’ E).Ruins of Occi, a deserted village near Lumio, Balagne, Haute-Corse, France (42°35’ N, 8°50’ E).
Pagoda of Chanteloup, Amboise, Indre-et-Loire, France (47°23’ N, 0°58’ E).Registered office of Bouygues «Challenger» at Guyancourt, Yvelines, France (48°47’ N, 2°04’ E).Medieval castle and fortress of Polignac, Haute-Loire, France (45°04’ N, 3°52’ E).




Detail of the Gallo-Roman ruins at Pontchartrain, Yvelines, France (48°48’ N, 1°54’ E).

One of the largest Gallo-Roman sites in ancient Gaul, Pontchartrain, which means “bridge of the Carnutes,” marks the entry point of the Roman road that crossed its lands. The ruins were discovered when the Route Nationale 12 bypass was being built around the town of Pontchartrain, and were subsequently protected to allow excavation. The idea that such sites are part of French heritage is a recent one. Roman and even Gothic ruins were often used as sources of building stone, and minor finds were thrown away by treasure hunters. From the 1960s onward, a new interest in the past, combined with economic growth that was transforming the landscape, encouraged archaeological investigations and brought a sense of their importance to the nation. According to historian Pierre Chaunu, more than a billion people have lived and left their mark on French soil since the time of Cro-Magnon man.

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