171 research outputs found
Early evidence of stone tool use in bone working activities at Qesem Cave, Israel
For a long while, the controversy surrounding several bone tools coming from pre-Upper Palaeolithic contexts favoured the view of Homo sapiens as the only species of the genus Homo capable of modifying animal bones into specialised tools. However, evidence such as South African Early Stone Age modified bones, European Lower Palaeolithic flaked bone tools, along with Middle and Late Pleistocene bone retouchers, led to a re-evaluation of the conception of Homo sapiens as the exclusive manufacturer of specialised bone tools. The evidence presented herein include use wear and bone residues identified on two flint scrapers as well as a sawing mark on a fallow deer tibia, not associated with butchering activities. Dated to more than 300 kya, the evidence here presented is among the earliest related to tool-assisted bone working intended for non-dietary purposes, and contributes to the debate over the recognition of bone working as a much older behaviour than previously thought. The results of this study come from the application of a combined methodological approach, comprising use wear analysis, residue analysis, and taphonomy. This approach allowed for the retrieval of both direct and indirect evidence of tool-assisted bone working, at the Lower Palaeolithic site of Qesem Cave (Israel)
The “when”, the “where” and the “why” of the Neolithic revolution in the Levant
An accumulation of data concerning the domestication of plants and the refinement of research questions in the last decade have enabled us a new look at the Neolithic Revolution and Neolithization processes in the Levant. This paper raises some points concerning the “When” and “Where” of plant domestication and suggests that the origins of plant domestication were in a welldefined region in southeast Turkey and north Syria. It presents a view on the process of Neolithization in the Levant and offers some comments concerning the background and motivations behind the Neolithic Revolution.Naraščanje količine podatkov o udomačitvi rastlin in vedno bolj natančna vprašanja raziskovalcev so v zadnjem desetletju omogočili, da na novo ovrednotimo neolitsko revolucijo in proces neolitizacije v Levantu. V članku izpostavljamo nekatere vidike “časa” in “kraja” udomačitve rastlin ter menimo, da je bil izvor udomačitve rastlin na jasno omejenem območju jugovzhodne Turčije in severne Sirije. Predstavimo pogled na proces neolitizacije v Levantu in nekoliko pojasnimo družbeno okolje in motive za neolitsko revolucijo
Use-wear analysis of an Amudian laminar assemblage from the Acheuleo-Yabrudian of Qesem Cave, Israel
In this paper the results of use-wear analysis of an Amudian lithic assemblage recently discovered at Qesem Cave, Israel, arc presented. Although very old. this assemblage maintains well-preserved traces of use that indicate that butchering activities and plants collecting were carried out at the site. Cut marks on faunal remains confirm the observations obtained by use-wear analysis. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Microwear analysis of small recycled flakes and recycling products from the Ein-Zippori site, Lower Galilee, Israel
A microwear analysis of recycled lithic artefacts from late Pottery Neolithic Wadi Rabah and Early Bronze Age layers at Ein-Zippori, Israel included cores-on-flakes (COFs) which are discarded blanks made into cores, and the flakes detached from them. COFs may have microwear traces that formed before they were recycled. The focus here is on how blanks removed from recycled COFs were used. Discarded flakes were not used as cores to produce small blanks at Ein-Zippori because lithic raw material was scarce, but were COFs recycled so that small tools could be produced for specific tasks? Visible wear traces were present on 19 of 44 blanks produced from COFs. Microwear traces were similar to use wear Lemorini et al. (2015) observed on much older Lower Paleolithic recycled flakes from Qesem Cave, Israel. Most flakes struck from COFs had been used to cut and scrape meat and fresh hide (42%, n=8), but four were used to work wood (21%) and four others were used to cut, scrape, or whittle bone and wood (21%), and two were used for butchering and wood working (11%). One flake only had generic weak microwear traces (5%). These were expedient flake tools, made and used in an ad hoc fashion. Specific blanks do not seem to have been used for distinct tasks
The use of fan scrapers: Microwear evidence from Late Pottery Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, Ein Zippori, Israel
The results of a microwear analysis of samples of fan scrapers and fan scrapers spalls from late Pottery Neolithic (PN) and Early Bronze Age (EBA) occupation layers at Ein Zippori, Lower Galilee, Israel are presented. The goal of the microwear analysis was to determine the function of the fan scrapers and compare the visible usewear on the scrapers found in late PN and EBA lithic assemblages. The results indicate that during both periods most of the fan scrapers were used to skin and butcher animals, while some were also used for hide processing and bone working. The working edges of the fan scrapers had sharp, moderate, or steep edge-angles, and different edges were used for different tasks. Edges with microwear from scraping meat, bone, and hides (including some hides that may have been treated with abrasives) had steep edge-angles, while there were moderate or sharp edge-angles on the edges of fan scrapers used for cutting. Two sub-types of fan scrapers were identified, flat cortex fan scrapers (FCFS), and cortical fan scrapers (CFS) with convex dorsal faces. The CFS were abundant in PN contexts, while the FCFS were more common in EBA layers. However both of the sub-types had similar microwear traces
A techno-typological analysis of fan (tabular) scrapers from Ein Zippori, Israel
Fan (or tabular) scrapers are a diagnostic tool type in Chalcolithic Ghassulian and Early Bronze Age lithic assemblages from the southern Levant. To date, only small numbers of fan scrapers have been reported from the Late Pottery Neolithic Wadi Rabah culture. In this paper we present a techno-typological analysis of a fair sample of fan scrapers and fan scrapers spalls from Wadi Rabah and Early Bronze Age layers at Ein Zippori, Lower Galilee, Israel. Techno-typological similarities and differences of Wadi Rabah, Chalcolithic Ghassulian and Early Bronze Age fan scrapers from Ein Zippori and other sites in the region are presented, trends of change along time are noted, and an updated definition is proposed. Our results indicate that fan scrapers are highly efficient tools for accurate and prolonged animal butchering and hide working. The main advantage of fan scrapers is their mostly flat, thin morphology and large size that permits the creation of several relatively long working edges, various retouched angles (from sharp to abrupt), extensive resharpening, and a comfortable grasp. While fan scrapers were products of a local trajectory in Late Pottery Neolithic Wadi Rabah lithic industries at Ein Zippori, a standardized, off-site manufacturing of fan scrapers is evident during the Early Bronze Age
Time to Go Beyond Chrono-Stratigraphy: The (EPPNB) Aswadian Culture of the Southern Levant
Abstract. Contrary to current trends, I strive in this paper to uphold culture history as a valid conceptual and analytical framework of archaeological analysis and define Neolithic cultures as representatives of specific past socio-cultural groups. Promoting this claim, I dwell on the cultural makeup of the early Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (EPPNB) period in the southern Levant and make a case for the Aswadian culture. Following a review of the Aswadian’s spatiotemporal and material culture features, the paper proceeds to propose that it may be split further into subcultures, making way for a more detailed understanding of its socio-cultural makeup. Notwithstanding gaps in our knowledge, I will draw on the Aswadian’s distinctiveness from other entities—the preceding PPNA Sultanian, the EPPNB of the northern Levant, and the very recently defined Badia culture of Jordan—to argue that it be considered a full-fledged cultural entity. Notably, the position of the Aswadian culture within the broader context of the Levantine Neolithization will also be considered. I will argue that, notwithstanding decisive, innovative trends in the north Levantine EPPNB, the Aswadian culture continued to maintain a hunter-gatherer way of life, resisting the incorporation of domesticates (plants and animals) into its economy, which do not appear in the southern Levant before the very end of the 11th millennium cal. BP and later in the Middle PPNB.Résumé. Contrairement aux tendances actuelles, je m’efforce dans cet article de soutenir l’histoire culturelle comme un cadre conceptuel et analytique valide de l’analyse archéologique, et de définir les cultures néolithiques comme des représentants de groupes socioculturels spécifiques du passé. Pour ce faire, je m’attarde sur la composition culturelle de la période du Néolithique précéramique B ancien (EPPNB) dans le sud du Levant et je plaide en faveur de la culture aswadienne. Après un examen des caractéristiques spatiotemporelles et matérielles de la culture asswadienne, l’article propose de la diviser davantage en sous-cultures, ce qui permet une compréhension plus détaillée de sa composition socioculturelle. Malgré les lacunes de nos connaissances, je m’appuie sur le fait que l’aswadien se distingue d’autres entités – le précédent Sultanien PPNA, l’EPPNB du nord du Levant et la culture de la Badia de Jordanie, définie très récemment – pour soutenir qu’il doit être considéré comme une entité culturelle à part entière. La position de la culture aswadienne dans le contexte plus large de la néolithisation levantine est également examinée. Je soutiens que, en dépit des tendances décisives et novatrices dans l’EPPNB du Levant Nord, la culture asswadienne a continué à maintenir un mode de vie de chasseur-cueilleur, résistant à l’incorporation de produits domestiques (plantes et animaux) dans son économie, qui n’apparaissent pas dans le Levant du Sud avant la toute fin du 11e millénaire cal. BP et plus tard au milieu du PPNB
Neolithic Arrowheads of the Levant : Results and Implications of a Seriation Analysis
A multi-dimensional seriation analysis of arrowhead assemblages from Neolithic sites in the Levant is presented. An attempt is made to correlate the relative dating obtained by seriation with stratigraphie evidence and available C-14 dates. The implications of the analysis for the study of diffusion processes and sub-regional contacts is also discussed.Une analyse multidimensionnelle des assemblages de pointes de flèches de sites Néolithiques du Levant est présentée. Une tentative de corrélation des datations relatives obtenues par la stratigraphie et des datations С14 disponibles est faite. Les implications de l'analyse pour l'étude des processus de diffusion et les contacts sub-régionaux sont aussi discutées.Gopher Avi. Neolithic Arrowheads of the Levant : Results and Implications of a Seriation Analysis. In: Paléorient, 1989, vol. 15, n°1. pp. 43-56
Sixth-fifth millennia B.C. settlements in the Coastal Plain, Israel.
- The paper, restricted to the Coastal Plain of Israel, presents a reconstruction of settlement history in this region emphasizing continuity albeit the meagre data available. The region is shortly described geographically and the data concerning the chronostratigraphy of the 6th-5lh mill. B.C. sites presented including available C-14 dates (uncalibrated). Aspects of site nature, economy, lithics, burial and art objects are summarised. A reconstruction of the coastal plain sequence including an early PPNC unit followed by the Yarmukian, Lodian (Jericho IX) and the Wadi Raba cultures, is offered. This is integrated into the wider framework of the southern Levant during the 6th-5th millennia B.C.RÉSUMÉ. - En dépit du peu d'information dont on dispose, une reconstitution de l'histoire du peuplement de la plaine côtière aux 6e -5e millénaires av. J.C. est présentée, qui met l'accent sur la continuité de l'occupation. Suit une description géographique, avec les données chronostratigraphiques et les dates Cl 4 (non calibrées) des sites dont on présente également la nature, l'économie, l'industrie Hthique, les sépultures et les objets d'art. Enfin, la séquence de la plaine côtière, impliquant un faciès du PPNC ancien, suivi par le Yarmoukien et le Lodien {Jéricho IX), est intégrée dans le cadre du Levant sud aux 6 -5L millénaires av. J.C.Gopher Avi. Sixth-fifth millennia B.C. settlements in the Coastal Plain, Israel.. In: Paléorient, 1993, vol. 19, n°1. pp. 55-63
- …
