Search results for "Stone tool"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

Introduction. Leave no stone unturned: Perspectives on ground stone artefact research

2016

Ground stone tools served in many physical and social contexts through millennia, reflecting a wide variety of functions. Although ground stone tool studies were neglected for much of early archaeology, the last few decades witnessed a notable international uptick in the way archaeologists confront this multifaceted topic. Today, with the advance of archaeology as a discipline, research into ground stone artefacts is moving into a new phase that integrates high resolution documentation with new methodological, analytical techniques, and technological approaches. These open new vistas for an array of studies and wide-ranging interpretive endeavours related to understanding ground stone tool …

010506 paleontologyHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectGlobeHigh resolution01 natural sciencesVisual artsground stone toolsPresentationDocumentationmedicine0601 history and archaeologyanthropologylcsh:CC1-960food production0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commonAGSTR060102 archaeologyGround stonearchaeology06 humanities and the artsArchaeologyVariety (cybernetics)medicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:ArchaeologyJournal of Lithic Studies
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Using mechanical experiments to study ground stone tool use: Exploring the formation of percussive and grinding wear traces on limestone tools

2021

Ground Stone Tools (GST) have been identified in several Levantine archaeological sites dating to the Middle Paleolithic. These tools, frequently made of limestone, are often interpreted based on their morphology and damage as having been used for knapping flint, and sometimes for breaking animal bones or processing vegetal materials as well. However, the lack of experimental referential collections on limestone is a major obstacle for the identification of diagnostic traces on these types of tools and raw material. In this sense, the understanding of the specific function of these GST and the association between tool types and activity often remains unknown or merely speculative. Recent di…

ArcheologyUse-wearKnappingSpecific functionGround stoneNatural (archaeology)GrindingPaleolithicMining engineeringGround stone toolsMiddle Paleolithic3D scanningMacroExperimentsAnimal boneQuantitative artifact microwear analysisLevantGeologyJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports
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Raw material variability as archaeological tools: Preliminary results from a geochemical study of the basalt vessel workshop at Iron Age Tel Hazor, I…

2016

The discovery of a basalt vessel workshop at Tel Hazor, one of the most important Iron Age sites in the Near East, marks a turning point in our understanding of stone artifact production and distribution during the1st millennium BCE. It offers a rare opportunity to characterize ancient raw material sources, production sites, and study production, trade and distribution systems. The basalt vessel workshop, the only one of its kind in the Levant, produced large quantities of bowl preforms and production waste. To better understand the production and distribution systems behind this specialized production center, in 2011 we initiated a focused geochemical project that concentrated on the produ…

Basaltbasalt vessels010506 paleontologyArtifact (archaeology)workshop060102 archaeologyIron AgeTel Hazor06 humanities and the artsRaw material01 natural sciencesArchaeologyground stone toolsDistribution systemExtraction siteTrace element compositionlcsh:Archaeology0601 history and archaeologyTurning pointlcsh:CC1-960GeologyBasaltic rockgeochemistry0105 earth and related environmental sciencesJournal of Lithic Studies
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Querns and mills during Roman times at the northern frontier of the Roman Empire (Belgium, Northern France, Southern Netherlands, Western Germany): U…

2016

International audience; This paper presents the results of a multi-disciplinary provenance study of querns and millstones during the Roman period (1st-4th century CE) in the northern part of the Roman Empire (provinces of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior). Comparative petrographical, mineralogical and geochemical analysis allowed an international team of archaeologists and geologists to identify the different raw materials used for the manufacturing of querns and millstones. As a result, (litho-) stratigraphic assignments as well as geological-geographical provenances are suggested or corroborated for the broad spectrum of these natural geo-materials. We give evidence for the exploitati…

Provenanceprovenance study[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory[SDU.STU.PE]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Petrography[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth SciencesmillstoneStructural basinGermania InferiorMillstoneground stone toolsquernsGallia Belgicalcsh:CC1-960060201 languages & linguisticsgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeoarchaeologyHistory and ArchaeologyGEOCHEMICAL DATA06 humanities and the artsArchaeologyRoman EmpireTRADEVolcanic rockRoman Empire0602 languages and literaturePeriod (geology)lcsh:ArchaeologySedimentary rockgeoarchaeologyGeology
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Tools, Human Development and Mathematics

2016

This chapter raises a number of issues from pre-history and history that one mathematics educator considers ‘worthy of mention’ with regard to tools and mathematics. These issues are: tool use in the development of the human species (phylogenesis); tool use in a mathematical culture, ancient Greek mathematics that goes beyond the obvious tools; an example from ancient Indian mathematics that bears some resemblances to Jon’s experimental mathematics described in Chap. 3; the mutual support of hand, mind and artefact in expert use of an abacus; a consideration of a period (sixteenth-century Europe) where there was a rapid advance in the development of mathematical tools.

Stone toolComputer scienceStraight edge010102 general mathematicsIndian mathematicsengineering.material01 natural sciencesHuman development (humanity)EpistemologyExperimental mathematicsMutual support0103 physical sciencesGreek mathematicsMathematics educationengineering010307 mathematical physics0101 mathematicsHuman speciesMathematics
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Evaluating the microscopic effect of brushing stone tools as a cleaning procedure

2020

Cleaning stone tool surfaces is a common procedure in lithic studies. The first step widely applied at any archeological site (and/or at field laboratories) is the gross removal of sediment from the surfaces of artifacts. Lithic surface alterations due to mechanical action applied in wet or dry cleaning regimes have never been examined at a microscopic scale. This could have important implications in traceology, as any modern surface modifications inflicted on archeological artifacts might compromise their functional interpretations. The current trend toward quantification of use-wear traces makes the testing even more important, as even slight, apparently invisible surface alterations migh…

Stone toolbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|AnthropologyBrushing010506 paleontologyCleaning protocolsSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|AnthropologyDry cleaningengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysicsUse-wear analysis01 natural sciencesMicroscopic scaleSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Archaeological AnthropologyStone toolsConfocal microscopyMining engineeringengineeringSurface roughnessbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Anthropology|Archaeological Anthropologybepress|Social and Behavioral SciencesSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral SciencesControlled experimentGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes
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Subsistence strategies throughout the African Middle Pleistocene: Faunal evidence for behavioral change and continuity across the Earlier to Middle S…

2018

Abstract The African Middle Pleistocene (781–126 ka) is a key period for human evolution, witnessing both the origin of the modern human lineage and the lithic turnover from Earlier Stone Age (ESA) Acheulean bifacial tools to Middle Stone Age (MSA) prepared core and point technologies. This ESA/MSA transition is interpreted as representing changing landscape use with greater foraging distances and more active hunting strategies. So far, these behavioral inferences are mainly based on the extensive stone tool record, with only a minor role for site-based and regional faunal studies. To provide additional insights into these behavioral changes, this paper details a pan-African metastudy of 63…

Technology010506 paleontologyPleistoceneContext (language use)engineering.material01 natural sciencesStone AgeLithic technologyAnimalsBody SizeHumans0601 history and archaeologyMiddle Stone AgeEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMammalsStone tool060101 anthropologyFossilsEcologyPaleontologyHominidae06 humanities and the artsDietGeographyArchaeologyHuman evolutionAnthropologyengineeringAcheuleanJournal of Human Evolution
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