82 research outputs found

    How can ten fingers shape a pot? Evidence for equivalent function in culturally distinct motor skills

    Get PDF
    Behavioural variability is likely to emerge when a particular task is performed in different cultural settings, assuming that part of human motor behaviour is influenced by culture. In analysing motor behaviour it is useful to distinguish how the action is performed from the result achieved. Does cultural environment lead to specific cultural motor skills? Are there differences between cultures both in the skills themselves and in the corresponding outcomes? Here we analyse the skill of pottery wheel-throwing in French and Indian cultural environments. Our specific goal was to examine the ability of expert potters from distinct cultural settings to reproduce a common model shape (a sphere). The operational aspects of motor performance were captured through the analysis of the hand positions used by the potters during the fashioning process. In parallel, the outcomes were captured by the geometrical characteristics of the vessels produced. As expected, results revealed a cultural influence on the operational aspects of the potters' motor skill. Yet, the marked cultural differences in hand positions used did not give rise to noticeable differences in the shapes of the vessels produced. Hence, for the simple model form studied, the culturally-specific motor traditions of the French and Indian potters gave rise to an equivalent outcome, that is shape uniformity. Further work is needed to test whether such equivalence is also observed in more complex ceramic shapes

    Kaizer Hill (Modi‘in), a pre-pottery neolithic a quarry site – the terraced slopes

    Get PDF
    The research of the Kaizer Hill site (the Hilltop and its Terraces), recognized as a Pre Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) quarry site, involved studies of the rock damage associated with the quarrying activities as well as of the recovered material remains, mostly chipped stone artifacts. We present here the results of our on-site explorations (excavations, surveys and surface-collections), focusing on the findings deriving from the Terraces. Diverse rock damage patterns were identified and described, portraying systematic rock mass-exploitation through quarrying fronts, natural rock joints and fissures enlargement, drilling and chiseling. There are multiple indications that the local bedrock (Bi’na Formation, Turonian) comprising flint and limestone was quarried under a systematic quality evaluation, leaving residual flint unsuitable for exploitation. Of interest to note that nearly all of the flint artifacts excavated and collected on the Terraces were made on raw material transported from the Hilltop (Mishash Formation, Campanian), knapped in-situ, on the quarried rock surfaces of the slopes. The flint tools bear witness to intensive use involving mainly boring and drilling. The dominant tool type is the flint axe for which a variety of waste products related to its production were found in-situ, enabling the reconstruction of axe reduction sequence. Similar axes and waste products were found in many PPN sites indicating that there was a common, widely-used scheme of making flint axes during the PPN. Interestingly, besides the flint waste, there were also limestone waste products typical of the last shaping and thinning stages of axe production, indicating that limestone axes were shaped technologically similar to the flint ones, contrary to what has been assumed before. Rare findings, such as obsidian pieces, originating from much further a-field indicate ties with other PPN communities, near and/or far. Overall, this study provides unique and novel insights on Levantine PPN lifeways

    AGMT3-D: A software for 3-D landmarks-based geometric morphometric shape analysis of archaeological artifacts.

    No full text
    We present here a newly developed software package named Artifact GeoMorph Toolbox 3-D (AGMT3-D). It is intended to provide archaeologists with a simple and easy-to-use tool for performing 3-D landmarks-based geometric morphometric shape analysis on 3-D digital models of archaeological artifacts. It requires no prior knowledge of programming or proficiency in statistics. AGMT3-D consists of a data-acquisition procedure for automatically positioning 3-D models in space and fitting them with grids of 3-D semi-landmarks. It also provides a number of analytical tools and procedures that allow the processing and statistical analysis of the data, including generalized Procrustes analysis, principal component analysis, a warp tool, automatic calculation of shape variabilities and statistical tests. It provides an output of quantitative, objective and reproducible results in numerical, textual and graphic formats. These can be used to answer archaeologically significant questions relating to morphologies and morphological variabilities in artifact assemblages. Following the presentation of the software and its functions, we apply it to a case study addressing the effects of different types of raw material on the morphologies and morphological variabilities present in an experimentally produced Acheulian handaxe assemblage. The results show that there are statistically significant differences between the mean shapes and shape variabilities of handaxes produced on flint and those produced on basalt. With AGMT3-D, users can analyze artifact assemblages and address questions that are deducible from the morphologies and morphological variabilities of material culture assemblages. These questions can relate to issues of, among others, relative chronology, cultural affinities, tool function and production technology. AGMT3-D is aimed at making 3-D landmarks-based geometric morphometric shape analysis more accessible to archaeologists, in the hope that this method will become a tool commonly used by archaeologists

    Landscape Alteration by Pre-Pottery Neolithic Communities in the Southern Levant - The Kaizer Hilltop Quarry, Israel.

    No full text
    This study focuses on Kaizer Hill, a quarry site located in the vicinity of the city of Modiin where remains of a single prehistoric cultural entity assigned to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A were discovered. A systematic survey revealed that large-scale quarrying activities have left damage markings on the bedrock of the Hilltop and its slopes. We aim to present here our findings from the Hilltop, which are concerned with the human impact on rock surfaces and the lithic artifacts retrieved during the survey. It is evident that the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A inhabitants of the area changed their landscape forever, "stripping" the caliche surface and penetrating it in search of flint bedded in the bedrock

    On the application of 3-D scanning technology for the documentation and typology of lithic artifacts

    No full text
    A 3-D optical scanner was used to obtain precise and complete representations of lithic artifacts. A computer algorithm, which was specially developed for the purpose, was used to position the artifacts in a way which enables the extraction of the standard metric parameters (length, width, width at 1/2 length, etc.). In this way, the ambiguities which affect the traditional manual measurements were eliminated. This new methodology creates accurate and objective databases. Several other parameters (center of mass position, volume, surface area) were also computed. The advantages of our method are illustrated by the analysis of 90 scanned Lower Paleolithic handaxes

    Attesting Neanderthal Dwelling Space Use: effects of human occupations in the Middle Palaeolithic record of Fumane cave (Verona, Italy) — ANDSU Project

    No full text
    none3siNo abstract availableopenMarta Modolo, Marco Peresani, Leore GrosmanModolo, Marta; Peresani, Marco; Grosman, Leor

    Recognizing technique variation in rock engravings: ArchCUT3-D for micromorphological analysis

    No full text
    Abstract Ancient rock engravings evoke the interest of archeologists and art historians as an important remnant of human cultures. Traditionally, engraved images are studied based on iconography, iconology, and stylistic characteristics, with little emphasis on execution technology. In contrast, the research method presented in this study strives to characterize the techniques adopted for making rock engravings in ancient times, with technological variations considered as indicators of the engraver’s production process. 3-D scans of two ancient engravings and contemporary graffiti were obtained from Site 25 in Timna Park, Southern Israel. The models were analyzed with ArchCUT3-D, a software specifically developed to precisely evaluate the 3-D micromorphological characteristics of the incisions making up the engraving. The software analyzes the surface micromorphology by extracting 3-D slices of the incisions using an accurate and repeatable method. Our results indicate that different incisions were executed by remarkably distinct techniques of stroking the rock surface with a sharp tool. The identification of discriminant characteristics enabled us to demonstrate the particularities of the engraving operations, such as ergonomic conditions and the level of consistency of the engraving gesture. ArchCUT3-D thus provides a computational method for incision technique recognition through micromorphology specifications, and the reconstruction of engraving gestures and individual production procedures

    The Natufian Occupation of Nahal Oren, Mt. Carmel, Israel - The Lithic Evidence

    No full text
    Abstract : This paper presents an analysis of the large Natufian tool assemblage (N = 10,378) from the excavations ofM. Stekelis (1954- 1957, 1959-1960) at the site of Nahal Oren Terrace. The site is located on the western escarpment of Mt. Carmel, situated amidst various ecological microhabitats within a Mediterranean climatic zone. The Natufian levels at the site, observed throughout all seasons of excavation, provided a plethora of archaeological data including a unique cemetery. The present account is a summary and discussion of a study focused on the Natufian lithic component recovered during excavation. Except for some very general observations, the material was never published. An endeavor was made to accommodate our results within the framework of modern research and current data pertaining to the Natufian culture, including information obtained during the 2nd series of excavations at the site (1969-1971). The importance of this assemblage stems partly from the fact that it represents one of the very few instances where there is seemingly a continuum of occupation from the Natufian through the following Neolithic cultures. Besides a detailed typological analysis, an endeavor was made to explore the spatial distribution aimed towards establishing relationship among the various activities areas at the site, especially between the burial ground and the surrounding areas. A study comparing this particular assemblage with both the Natufian assemblage derived during the 2nd series of excavations and assemblages from other Natufian sites made clear the basic nature of this Late Natufian assemblage. The various lines of study demonstrate that there was a continuum of human occupation (or at least a constant presence) all through the Late Natufian (13-11 600 BP cal).RĂ©sumĂ© : Dans cet article, nous prĂ©sentons une analyse de l'abondant matĂ©riel lithique natoufien (n = 10 378) rĂ©coltĂ© lors des fouilles de M. Stekelis (1954-1957, 1959-1960) sur le site de la terrasse de Nahal Oren. Le gisement se trouve sur le rebord Ouest du Mt Carmel, aux confins de diffĂ©rentes micro-niches Ă©cologiques au sein de la zone mĂ©diterranĂ©enne. Les niveaux natoufiens, fouillĂ©s tout au long des diffĂ©rentes campagnes, ont livrĂ© une quantitĂ© impressionnante d'informations archĂ©ologiques incluant une nĂ©cropole remarquable. Nous prĂ©sentons ici une synthĂšse de l 'Ă©tude rĂ©alisĂ©e sur le matĂ©riel lithique natoufien rĂ©coltĂ© durant ces fouilles, et les discussions qui en dĂ©coulent. Ce matĂ©riel n 'a jamais Ă©tĂ© publiĂ©, Ă part quelques observations d'ordre gĂ©nĂ©ral. Nous avons tentĂ© de replacer les rĂ©sultats obtenus dans le contexte de la recherche actuelle sur la culture natoufienne en intĂ©grant Ă©galement les informations obtenues lors de la seconde sĂ©rie de fouilles sur le site entre 1969 et 1971. L 'Ă©tude de ce matĂ©riel trouve tout son intĂ©rĂȘt dans le fait que la terrasse de Nahal Oren semble constituer l 'un des rares cas d 'occupation continue depuis le Natoufien jusqu 'au NĂ©olithique. En plus d'une Ă©tude typologique dĂ©taillĂ©e, nous avons tentĂ©, par une Ă©tude des rĂ©partitions spatiales, d'Ă©tablir les relations entre les diffĂ©rentes zones d'activitĂ© sur le site, plus particuliĂšrement entre la zone des sĂ©pultures et les zones environnantes. Les comparaisons effectuĂ©es avec le matĂ©riel provenant des fouilles plus rĂ©centes et avec celui d'autres sites natoufiens indiquent clairement que ces assemblages lithiques appartiennent au Natoufien rĂ©cent. Tous les Ă©lĂ©ments de notre Ă©tude dĂ©montrent la continuitĂ© des occupations (ou du moins une prĂ©sence constante) tout au long de cette pĂ©riode entre 13 000 et 11 600 BP cal.Grosman Leore, Ashkenazy Hila, Belfer-Cohen Anna. The Natufian Occupation of Nahal Oren, Mt. Carmel, Israel - The Lithic Evidence. In: PalĂ©orient, 2005, vol. 31, n°2. pp. 5-26

    Types and frequencies observed on the three sampled rocks.

    No full text
    <p>Types and frequencies observed on the three sampled rocks.</p
    • 

    corecore