A reconstructed reduction sequence for curved bifacial stone tools from the eastern La Plata Basin, Argentina
A reconstructed reduction sequence for curved bifacial stone tools from the eastern La Plata Basin, Argentina
A distinctive regional lithic industry is found in the eastern La Plata basin, known as the Altoparanaense culture in northeastern Argentina, and the Humaitá tradition in southern Brazil. These archaeological cultures are recognised on the basis of large bifacial tools. The earliest deposits are dated to the ninth millennium BP, and elements of these industries continue to be produced into the post-contact period (8640±95 to 310±50 cal BP). One of the most characteristic features of the assemblages in the region is the presence of a particular class of bifacial tool known as “curved cleavers”, whose name stems from their distinctive asymmetrical shape. We describe the reduction sequence of these tools based on a spatially extensive sample from Misiones province, Argentina. This study provides for the first time a full chaîne opératoire for curved cleavers and compares it to the findings of the only published experimental study. We use a logistic regression model to verify the reconstructed five-stage reduction sequence and further support it with a metric analysis of artefact attributes within each identified stage of reduction. Our results support the conclusion that many bifacially reduced artefacts encountered in the larger study region may actually be unrecognised pre-forms of curved cleavers
5-17
Riris, Philip
54e2bafd-3967-4bbd-a004-04d08cb4cfc6
Romanowska, Izabela
d8a3e360-26c3-4f3b-8b50-1f6ae11368dc
2014
Riris, Philip
54e2bafd-3967-4bbd-a004-04d08cb4cfc6
Romanowska, Izabela
d8a3e360-26c3-4f3b-8b50-1f6ae11368dc
Riris, Philip and Romanowska, Izabela
(2014)
A reconstructed reduction sequence for curved bifacial stone tools from the eastern La Plata Basin, Argentina.
Lithics, 35, .
Abstract
A distinctive regional lithic industry is found in the eastern La Plata basin, known as the Altoparanaense culture in northeastern Argentina, and the Humaitá tradition in southern Brazil. These archaeological cultures are recognised on the basis of large bifacial tools. The earliest deposits are dated to the ninth millennium BP, and elements of these industries continue to be produced into the post-contact period (8640±95 to 310±50 cal BP). One of the most characteristic features of the assemblages in the region is the presence of a particular class of bifacial tool known as “curved cleavers”, whose name stems from their distinctive asymmetrical shape. We describe the reduction sequence of these tools based on a spatially extensive sample from Misiones province, Argentina. This study provides for the first time a full chaîne opératoire for curved cleavers and compares it to the findings of the only published experimental study. We use a logistic regression model to verify the reconstructed five-stage reduction sequence and further support it with a metric analysis of artefact attributes within each identified stage of reduction. Our results support the conclusion that many bifacially reduced artefacts encountered in the larger study region may actually be unrecognised pre-forms of curved cleavers
Text
Riris and Romanowska 2014.pdf
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Published date: 2014
Organisations:
Archaeology
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Local EPrints ID: 378828
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378828
ISSN: 0262-7817
PURE UUID: 23260713-5f1c-4fc5-902a-5751421b3c29
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Date deposited: 17 Jul 2015 09:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:29
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Author:
Philip Riris
Author:
Izabela Romanowska
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