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Trade me an axe? Interpretive challenges of the distribution and provenance of Neolithic basaltic bifacial tools in Israel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2016

Danny Rosenberg
Affiliation:
Laboratory for Ground-Stone Tools Research, The Zinman Institute of Archaeology, University of Haifa, Haifa, Mount Carmel 3498838, Israel (Email: drosenberg@research.haifa.ac.il)
Tatjana Gluhak
Affiliation:
Institute of Geosciences, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, J.-J.-Becher-Weg 21, D-55128 Mainz, Germany (Email: gluhak@uni-mainz.de)

Abstract

The discovery of a Neolithic quarry and production site for basanite bifacial tools at Giv‘at Kipod in Israel has provided new insights into these socially significant artefacts. Geochemical analysis of material from the quarry distinguishes it from other basaltic rock sources in Israel, allowing stone tools from a variety of sites and dated contexts to be assigned a provenance. Results suggest that Giv‘at Kipod was an important production centre for over several millennia. It operated primarily on a local, regional level and independently of the parallel manufacture-and-distribution mechanisms of flint bifacials. While flint tools developed in response to the practical requirements of the transition to agriculture in the region, ground-stone bifacials appear to have been a product of economic changes and evolving social structures.

Type
Research
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2016 

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