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Why handaxes just aren't that sexy: a response to Kohn & Mithen (1999)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Anna Jane Machin*
Affiliation:
*Pembroke House, Rectory Lane, Fringford, Oxon, OX27 8DX, UK (Email: amachin@claranet.co.uk)

Extract

The Acheulean handaxe is one of the most iconic, analysed and fiercely debated artefacts from the prehistoric period. Persisting for over one million years and recovered from sites across the Old World its distinctive, often symmetrical, tear drop or ovate shape appears to be over-engineered for a subsistence function alone. Debate has centred upon trying to unravel the reasons for this form; raw material, knapping technique, subsistence function, cognition, social context of manufacture and sexual selection have all been proposed as key factors (Jones 1994; White 1998; Gamble 1999; Kohn & Mithen 1999; McPherron 2000; Gowlett 2006).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2008

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