Home

ARCHIVES
(6223 articles):
 

EDITORIAL TEAM:
 
Clive Price-Jones 
Diego Meozzi 
Paola Arosio 
Philip Hansen 
Wolf Thandoy 


If you think our news service is a valuable resource, please consider a donation. Select your currency and click the PayPal button:



Main Index
Podcast


Archaeo News 

24 December 2011
9500-year-old obsidian bracelet reveals craftsmen's skills

The Laboratoire de Tribologie et de Dynamiques des Systèmes have analyzed the oldest obsidian bracelet ever identified, discovered in the 1990s at the site of Aşıklı Höyük, Turkey; the researchers have revealed the astounding technical expertise of craftsmen in the eighth millennium BCE. This work is published in the December 2011 issue of Journal of Archaeological Science, and sheds new light on Neolithic societies.
     Dated to 7500 BCE, the obsidian bracelet studied by the researchers is the earliest evidence of obsidian working, which only reached its peak in the seventh and sixth millennia BCE. It has a complex shape and a remarkable central annular ridge, and is 10 cm in diameter and 3.3 cm wide. Discovered in 1995 at the site of Asıklı Höyük in Turkey and displayed ever since at the Aksaray Archeological Museum, the ring was studied in 2009, after Mihriban Özbasaran, Professor at the University of Istanbul's Department of Prehistory, resumed excavations.
     Laurence Astruc, a CNRS researcher and her colleagues analyzed the bracelet using technologies developed by LTDS researchers Hassan Zahouani (ENISE) and Roberto Vargiolu (ECL). These methods, known as multi-scale tribological analysis, have been adapted for the study of micro-topographic features on archeological artefacts. They seek to identify every single operation performed on the surface of these objects.
     This process has revealed that the bracelet was made using highly specialized manufacturing techniques. The analyses carried out showed that the bracelet was almost perfectly regular. The symmetry of the central annular ridge is extremely precise, to the nearest degree and nearest hundred micrometers. This suggests that the artisans of the time used models to control its shape when it was being made. The surface finish of the bracelet (which is very regular, resembling a mirror) required the use of complex polishing techniques capable of obtaining a nanometer-scale surface quality worthy of today's telescope lenses.
     The work was carried out as part of the 'Obsidian: Practical Techniques and Uses in Anatolia' program. In the program, the Asıklı Höyük bracelet is the first object to have been studied among some sixty other polished obsidian artefacts. In collaboration with the University of Manchester and the British Museum, Laurence Astruc's team is now analyzing ornamental objects found at the Halaf sites of Domuztepe in Eastern Central Anatolia and Arpachiyyah in Iraq.

Edited from PhysOrg.com (21 December 2011)

Share this webpage:


Copyright Statement
Publishing system powered by Movable Type 2.63

HOMESHOPTOURSPREHISTORAMAFORUMSGLOSSARYMEGALINKSFEEDBACKFAQABOUT US TOP OF PAGE ^^^