RC

8 records found

Complicating the debate

Evaluating the potential of gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry for differentiating prehistoric aceramic tar production techniques

Birch bark tar was used extensively throughout human history. While later ceramic-based production technologies are known, prehistoric aceramic techniques leave little to no archaeological evidence. Experimental tar production attempts to fill this gap and suggest potential techn ...
Evidence of different compound resin-based adhesives is present in South Africa from at least 77000 years ago. Ancient glue production is considered one of the oldest known highly complex technologies, requiring advanced technological and mental abilities. However, our current kn ...

Foodways of an agro-pastoral community

Organic residue analysis of pottery and stone vessels at Middle Chalcolithic Tel Tsaf

Tel Tsaf is a Middle Chalcolithic (ca. 5200–4700 cal BC) site located in the central Jordan Valley, Israel. The site reflects increasing long-distance trade, organized cereal crop cultivation and possibly olive horticulture. Organic residue analysis of lipids recovered from 100 p ...

Dietary continuation in the southern Levant

A Neolithic-Chalcolithic perspective through organic residue analysis

Foodways in the late prehistoric southern Levant evolved alongside changes in the social and economic organization of the communities occupying the region. In this paper, we present a comprehensive study of culinary practices from the Pottery Neolithic to the Late Chalcolithic pe ...

Bee products in the prehistoric southern levant

Evidence from the lipid organic record

Beehive products have a rich global history. In the wider Levantine region, bees had a significant role in Egypt and Mesopotamia, and intensive beekeeping was noted in Israel during the Biblical period when apiaries were first identified. This study investigates the origins of th ...

Between Novelty and Variability

Natufian Hunter-Gatherers (c. 15-11.7 kyr) Proto-Agrotechnology and the Question of Morphometric Variations of the Earliest Sickles

How hunter-gatherers manipulated and utilised their natural surroundings is a widely studied topic among anthropologists and archaeologists alike. This focuses on the Natufian culture of the Late Epipalaeolithic period (c. 15-11.7 kyr), the last Levantine hunter-gatherer populati ...

Stone ‘canvas’ and Natufian art

An incised human figure from the Natufian cemetery at Raqefet Cave, Israel

The Natufian culture is the first cultural entity in the southern Levant to have large graveyards and a wide array of symbolic expressions. Hundreds of Natufian burials have been discovered and studied; at some Natufian sites the presence of stone slabs within the graves has been ...

Basalt vessels in Chalcolithic burial caves

Variations in prestige burial offerings during the Chalcolithic period of the southern Levant and their social significance

The Late Chalcolithic of the southern Levant is in part characterized by increased formalized ritual behavior, specifically in the form of burial caves. These caves feature a high variety of utilitarian and prestige grave goods. One of the notable finds in some of the burial cave ...