

Connecting, by walking, two places, two acts to make them resonate. The cave paintings of Pech Merle, in the Lot and the nuclear waste burial project in Bure, in the Meuse.
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In June 2019, Étienne Davodeau undertook, on foot and backpack, an 800 km journey, between the cave of Pech Merle and Bure. From cave paintings, still protected treasures of humanity, to nuclear waste buried underground, a misfortune foretold for living species.
Étienne Davodeau, a sapiens among sapiens, questions our relationship with the ground. As a walker-observer, it warns of an imminent collective vertigo and invites you to travel through time and space.
Which planet will future generations inherit?
What are we going to leave to those who will be born after us?
How can we alert them to this terrible and real danger to their survival?
It is our collective responsibility to move forward on energy issues to protect the "skin of the world".
In this walk through France, he is sometimes accompanied by friends, his partner, but also specialists, whom he summons on these trails to tell us the unique history of the soil of our planet, or that of nuclear power and its waste, dangerous for several hundred thousand years.
On the fringes of testimony and augmented journalism, the Droit du sol marks Étienne Davodeau's great return to reportage comics.
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