The Pont-de-Lavaud site, located in the Centre Region of France (Creuse Valley), yielded a quartzlithic assemblage composed of a few hundred artefacts with cores, pebble tools, flakes and flake-tools, mixed withseveral thousand debris items and pebbles. The archaeological site is covered by a fossil fluvial deposit from theCreuse River (sheet I, with a relative altitude of þ 90/105 m), dated by Electron Spin Resonance at the site itself toaround 1 Ma. We will focus in this paper on the lithic assemblage with clear anthropogenic features to describe thetechnological strategies applied to quartz pebbles, with the help of experiments. The core technology is based onshort ‘cha^nes operatoires’ on local quartz aimed at producing pointed end-products on pebbles and flakes. Themethods and techniques include both the bipolar technique on an anvil and direct percussion with a hard hammer.The reduction sequences were strongly conditioned by the morphology and the physical characteristics of the rawmaterial. Few flakes are retouched. The Pont-de-Lavaud lithic assemblage is one example of the diversity of the 1-Ma European industries. The assemblage shows techno-cultural behavioural variability at this period andadaptation to raw material constraints. Comparisons with series where the use of quartz is widespread demonstratethe ability of hominins to use stones of varying quality and to adapt technology to the raw material in zoneslocated beyond the 45th parallel north.

The 1-million-year-old quartz assemblage from Pont-de-Lavaud (Centre, France) in the European context

Arzarello, Marta;BAHAIN, Jean Jacques
Penultimo
;
FALGUERES, Christophe
Ultimo
2018

Abstract

The Pont-de-Lavaud site, located in the Centre Region of France (Creuse Valley), yielded a quartzlithic assemblage composed of a few hundred artefacts with cores, pebble tools, flakes and flake-tools, mixed withseveral thousand debris items and pebbles. The archaeological site is covered by a fossil fluvial deposit from theCreuse River (sheet I, with a relative altitude of þ 90/105 m), dated by Electron Spin Resonance at the site itself toaround 1 Ma. We will focus in this paper on the lithic assemblage with clear anthropogenic features to describe thetechnological strategies applied to quartz pebbles, with the help of experiments. The core technology is based onshort ‘cha^nes operatoires’ on local quartz aimed at producing pointed end-products on pebbles and flakes. Themethods and techniques include both the bipolar technique on an anvil and direct percussion with a hard hammer.The reduction sequences were strongly conditioned by the morphology and the physical characteristics of the rawmaterial. Few flakes are retouched. The Pont-de-Lavaud lithic assemblage is one example of the diversity of the 1-Ma European industries. The assemblage shows techno-cultural behavioural variability at this period andadaptation to raw material constraints. Comparisons with series where the use of quartz is widespread demonstratethe ability of hominins to use stones of varying quality and to adapt technology to the raw material in zoneslocated beyond the 45th parallel north.
2018
Despriée, Jackie; Moncel, Marie-Hélène; Arzarello, Marta; Courcimault, Gilles; Voinchet, Pierre; Bahain, Jean Jacques; Falgueres, Christophe
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Despri-e_et_al-2018-Journal_of_Quaternary_Science.pdf

solo gestori archivio

Descrizione: Full text ahead of print
Tipologia: Full text (versione editoriale)
Licenza: NON PUBBLICO - Accesso privato/ristretto
Dimensione 13.94 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
13.94 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pond de Lavaud JQS pour HAL.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Pre-print
Tipologia: Pre-print
Licenza: PUBBLICO - Pubblico con Copyright
Dimensione 9.76 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
9.76 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/2391038
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 14
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 15
social impact