Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.

The Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany, the so-called Beuronian (9600-7100 BC), is a period of important transformations in the way people lived, in their subsistence and in the stone tools they produced. One of the perhaps most spectacular re-inventions of that time is heat treatment of stone...

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Main Authors: Patrick Schmidt, Océane Spinelli Sanchez, Claus-Joachim Kind
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5718480?pdf=render
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author Patrick Schmidt
Océane Spinelli Sanchez
Claus-Joachim Kind
author_facet Patrick Schmidt
Océane Spinelli Sanchez
Claus-Joachim Kind
author_sort Patrick Schmidt
collection DOAJ
description The Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany, the so-called Beuronian (9600-7100 BC), is a period of important transformations in the way people lived, in their subsistence and in the stone tools they produced. One of the perhaps most spectacular re-inventions of that time is heat treatment of stones prior to their manufacture into tools. Although heat treatment has been understood as one of the defining characteristics of the Beuronian of southwestern Germany, and although its existence has been known for almost 30 years now, relatively few systematic studies on it are available. In this paper, we present such a study, aiming to shed light on two questions: (1) what technique and heating parameters were used in the Beuronian and (2) how reliable are the macroscopic proxies traditionally used to identify heat treatment in this context? We investigate these questions using a non-destructive archaeometric technique for measuring past heating temperatures of heat-treated stones and a quantitative surface roughness analysis aiming to understand the relations between surface aspect and heat treatment. These methods are applied to 46 Jurassic chert artefacts from the site Helga-Abri located in the Swabian Alb region of southwestern Germany. Our results document that an opportunistic low-investment procedure was used to heat stone, probably relying on the use of the above-ground part of regular camp-fires. We also found that the traditionally used macroscopic criteria, such as colour and surface gloss, cannot be unambiguously used to identify heat treatment in assemblages made from Jurassic chert. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the Beuronian lithic chaîne opératoire in terms of the investment in time and resources necessary, and for the refinement of archaeological techniques used to identify heat treatment in the Mesolithic of the Swabian Alb.
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spelling doaj.art-a25558c9351041b6b6da7d8c991f9c982022-12-22T03:20:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011212e018857610.1371/journal.pone.0188576Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.Patrick SchmidtOcéane Spinelli SanchezClaus-Joachim KindThe Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany, the so-called Beuronian (9600-7100 BC), is a period of important transformations in the way people lived, in their subsistence and in the stone tools they produced. One of the perhaps most spectacular re-inventions of that time is heat treatment of stones prior to their manufacture into tools. Although heat treatment has been understood as one of the defining characteristics of the Beuronian of southwestern Germany, and although its existence has been known for almost 30 years now, relatively few systematic studies on it are available. In this paper, we present such a study, aiming to shed light on two questions: (1) what technique and heating parameters were used in the Beuronian and (2) how reliable are the macroscopic proxies traditionally used to identify heat treatment in this context? We investigate these questions using a non-destructive archaeometric technique for measuring past heating temperatures of heat-treated stones and a quantitative surface roughness analysis aiming to understand the relations between surface aspect and heat treatment. These methods are applied to 46 Jurassic chert artefacts from the site Helga-Abri located in the Swabian Alb region of southwestern Germany. Our results document that an opportunistic low-investment procedure was used to heat stone, probably relying on the use of the above-ground part of regular camp-fires. We also found that the traditionally used macroscopic criteria, such as colour and surface gloss, cannot be unambiguously used to identify heat treatment in assemblages made from Jurassic chert. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the Beuronian lithic chaîne opératoire in terms of the investment in time and resources necessary, and for the refinement of archaeological techniques used to identify heat treatment in the Mesolithic of the Swabian Alb.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5718480?pdf=render
spellingShingle Patrick Schmidt
Océane Spinelli Sanchez
Claus-Joachim Kind
Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
PLoS ONE
title Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
title_full Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
title_fullStr Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
title_full_unstemmed Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
title_short Stone heat treatment in the Early Mesolithic of southwestern Germany: Interpretation and identification.
title_sort stone heat treatment in the early mesolithic of southwestern germany interpretation and identification
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5718480?pdf=render
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