Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/179217
Title: New data concerning 'large blades' in Catalonia: Apt-Forcalquier chert in the Penedès (south of Barcelona) during the Late Neolithic - Chalcolithic
Author: Mangado Llach, Xavier
Vaquer, Jean
Gibaja, Juan F. (Juan Francisco)
Oms Arias, F. Xavier
Cebrià, Artur
González Olivares, Cynthia Belén
Martin Colliga, Araceli
Marín, Dioscórides
Keywords: Utensilis de pedra
Monuments funeraris
Neolític
Edat del bronze
Península Ibèrica
Stone implements
Sepulchral monuments
Neolithic period
Bronze age
Iberian Peninsula
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2016
Publisher: University of Edinburgh
Abstract: The study of large chert blades documented in funerary contexts from the Late Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age in the north-eastern part of Iberia has been addressed in recent works by the authors, in which 49 burial sites have been registered with more than 200 large chert blades. In this paper the recent data obtained from the study of seven archaeological sites located in the region of the Penedès (southwest of Barcelona) is presented. The macroscopic characterization of the knapped stone industries shows their great variety regarding the origin of the siliceous raw material, often coming from outside the analysed region. In some cases their macroscopic features link them to Apt-Forcalquier chert (Haut Provence, France), which was widely distributed in the form of large blades during these phases of Late Catalan prehistory. The absence of evidence of the chaîne opératoire production of this type of foreign chert in the lithic assemblages in Catalonia lead to the supposition that the dispersion of the blades was done as trade items, and only in a few cases were highly complex technological tools of this kind of raw material distributed (e.g., daggers). Use-wear analysis reveals that these blades were not merely luxury items in grave goods. Far from this idea, they have to be considered as functional, even multifunctional, items. All the same, it is thought that they must have had an important value because they moved from the domestic sphere to the graves. In fact, the pieces that usually remain are not small fragments, but whole or almost whole, large blades that normally remain effective.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.2218/jls.v3i2.1833
It is part of: Journal of Lithics Studies, 2016, vol. 3, num. 2, p. 481-486
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/179217
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.2218/jls.v3i2.1833
ISSN: 2055-0472
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Història i Arqueologia)

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