Gouy Cave (French: Grotte de Gouy) is a cave with engravings dating to the paleolithic era in Gouy, France.
[1] It has the northernmost paleolithic cave art found in France.
[2] The cave was discovered in 1956 by two boys, though inscriptions in the cave indicate that the cave was found but unreported by locals in 1881.
[1][3] Engravings found in Gouy Cave depict animals, including ox, horses, and deer.
[1] In 2010, the Archaeological Institute of America declared the site at risk due to tree roots growing in the cave's limestone walls.