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The Iceman's lithic toolkit: Raw material, technology, typology and use
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 6, p e0198292 (2018)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- The Tyrolean Iceman, a 5,300-year-old glacier mummy recovered at the Tisenjoch (South Tyrol, Italy) together with his clothes and personal equipment, represents a unique opportunity for prehistoric research. The present work examines the Iceman's tools which are made from chert or are related to chert working - dagger, two arrowheads, endscraper, borer, small flake and antler retoucher - and considers also the arrowhead still embedded in the shoulder of the mummy. The interdisciplinary results achieved by study of the lithic raw material, technology, use-wear analysis, CT analysis and typology all add new information to OÈtzi`sindividual history and his last days, and allow insights into the way of life of Alpine Copper Age communities. The chert raw material of the small assemblage originates from at least three different areas of provenance in the Southalpine region. One, or possibly two, sources derive from outcrops in the Trentino, specifically the Non Valley. Such variability suggests an extensive provisioning network, not at all limited to the Lessini mountains, which was able to reach the local communities. The Iceman's toolkit displays typological characteristics of the Northern Italian tradition, but also comprises features typical of the Swiss Horgen culture, which will come as no surprise in the toolkit of a man who lived in a territory where transalpine contacts would have been of great importance. OÈtzi was not a flintknapper, but he was able to resharpen his tools with a medium to good level of skill. Wear traces reveal that he was a right-hander. Most instruments in the toolkit had reached their final stage of usability, displaying extensive usage, mostly from plant working, resharpenings and breaks. Evidently OÈtzi had not had any access to chert for quite some time, which must have been problematic during his last hectic days, preventing him from repairing and integrating his weapons, in particular his arrows. Freshly modified blade tools without any wear suggest planned work which he never carried out, possibly prevented by the events which made him return to the mountains where he was killed by a Southern Alpine archer.
- Subjects :
- European People
Topography
Raw Materials
lcsh:Medicine
Social Sciences
Antlers
01 natural sciences
Iceman
Assemblage (archaeology)
Ethnicities
0601 history and archaeology
Plateaus
Animal Anatomy
lcsh:Science
History, Ancient
Mammals
Minerals
Multidisciplinary
060102 archaeology
Eukaryota
06 humanities and the arts
Ruminants
Copper age
Mineralogy
Limestone
Italian People
Dagger
Geography
Italy
Archaeology
Physical Sciences
Vertebrates
Physical Anthropology
Weapons
Tyrol, ice mummy, lithic tools
Switzerland
Research Article
010506 paleontology
Arrowhead
Materials Science
Clothing
Prehistory
Paleoanthropology
Humans
Animals
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Landforms
Iceman , Copper age
Deer
lcsh:R
Organisms
Biology and Life Sciences
Paleontology
Geomorphology
Chalcolithic
Mummies
Anthropology
People and Places
Amniotes
Earth Sciences
lcsh:Q
Population Groupings
Blade (archaeology)
Zoology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 13
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e24ef5d9e4f5e475a7927bf5cbd75f22