Working back along the timeline of human history, we explored the Roman impact on the area. In the city of Nîmes, is the best preserved roman arena. Though not as large the colliseum in Rome, it is very well interpreted. We could have stayed longer but we had something even bigger to see. Pont de Gard is the largest Roman aqueduct still standing. We walked across it and marvelled at the engineering.
And even further back in time, we drove towards the Pyrenees mountains, to Niaux. Here, there is one of the few prehistoric cave painting sites, still open to the public. The paintings are said to be comparable to the famous Lascaux caves. 14,000 years old and still telling their stories.
Then we jumped back to the modern engineering of humans, with a visit to the AirBus 380 assembly plant in Toulouse. Seeing how these massive planes are conceptualised, tested, and built was pretty incredible.
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