0000000000172541

AUTHOR

Mariangela La Monica

showing 2 related works from this author

Obsidians of Pantelleria (Strait of Sicily): A Petrographic, Geochemical and Magnetic Study of Known and New Geological Sources

2020

Abstract This paper provides new petrochemical and paleomagnetic data from obsidian sub-sources on the island of Pantelleria, exploited since the Neolithic. Data has been obtained from 14 obsidian samples from 4 locations: Fossa della Pernice (2 sites), Salto la Vecchia and Balata dei Turchi. Here, we aim to better characterize these obsidians using a cross-disciplinary and multi-analytical approach, to further understand their archaeological significance. Major element analyses (EMP) have enabled two compositional super-groups to be distinguished: (i) Fossa della Pernice, less peralkaline and (ii) Balata dei Turchi–Salto la Vecchia, distinctly more peralkaline and having almost identical c…

Bronze ageObsidianArcheology060102 archaeologyGeochemistrySettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E Petrografia06 humanities and the artsConservation010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesLipariEducationPetrographyArchaeologyUstica0601 history and archaeologyMagnetic studyGeologyCC1-960Pantelleria0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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THE BLACK GOLD THAT CAME FROM THE SEA. A REVIEW OF OBSIDIAN STUDIES AT THE ISLAND OF USTICA

2018

Volcanism has produced a natural glass called obsidian that during prehistoric times, from Neolithic to the Metal Ages, was considered a valuable raw material in order to produce efficient cutting tools. Ustica, a small and solitary island in the southwestern Tyrrhenian Sea, despite being volcanic, did not generate any obsidian. Yet the island's soils return large quantities of obsidian fragments, residues of prehistoric use. Where did this material, defined by some archaeologists as the Black Gold of prehistory, come from? This article reviews the archaeometric studies on Ustica’s obsidians, carried out since the middle o f the 1990s, to answer this question. The obsidians of Ustica have b…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category060102 archaeologyContext (language use)06 humanities and the artsVolcanism010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesArchaeologyNatural (archaeology)Archaeological sciencePrehistoryGeophysicsMediterranean seaVolcanoSpring (hydrology)0601 history and archaeologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAnnals of Geophysics
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