new find of a Mesolithic antler axe from western Poland

Q2 Arts and Humanities Sprawozdania Archeologiczne Pub Date : 2023-04-06 DOI:10.23858/sa/74.2022.2.2764
Tomasz Płonka, M. Diakowski, Bernadeta Kufel-Diakowska, Wojciech Bronowicki, B. Miazga, K. Stefaniak
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Abstract

In 2017, a man fishing in the Oder River accidentally discovered an antler-base axe in the village of Domaszków, Lower Silesian Voivodeship. In-depth study of the axe included analysis of the traces on its surface, radiocarbon dating and paleogenetic analysis, and concluded with the tool’s conservation. Most of the traces casting light on the techniques used in its crafting had been eroded by intensive water action. The axe was made from the unshed red deer antler. Among the preserved marks we note pointed depressions made during the separation of the antler beam, traces where the brow and bay tines were cut off, and concentric rings from the drilling of the perforation. A small scar on the axe’s blade was identified as resulting from the tool’s use. Radiocarbon dating placed the origins of the axe in Boreal period. Such tools are known from western Poland and the north-western European Mesolithic as well as from the Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age.
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在波兰西部新发现的中石器时代鹿角斧
2017年,一名在奥得河钓鱼的男子在下西里西亚省Domaszków村意外发现了一把鹿角斧。对这把斧头的深入研究包括对其表面痕迹的分析、放射性碳定年法和古成因分析,最后得出了这把斧头的保存情况。大多数能说明其制作工艺的痕迹都被强烈的水侵蚀了。这把斧头是用赤鹿角做的。在保存下来的痕迹中,我们注意到在分离鹿角梁时留下的尖凹,前额和海湾时代被切断的痕迹,以及钻孔时留下的同心圆环。斧刃上的一个小伤疤被确认为是使用该工具造成的。放射性碳年代测定法确定这把斧头的起源在北方寒带时期。这种工具在波兰西部和欧洲西北部的中石器时代以及新石器时代和早期青铜时代就已经为人所知。
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Sprawozdania Archeologiczne
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
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0.90
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期刊介绍: Sprawozdania Archeologiczneis a peer-reviewed Polish archaeological journal edited and published annually in English and German by the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, intended especially for Polish and Central-European readership. Its main aim is to present a wide range of approaches to issues in contemporary archaeology and to publish materials and findings of field surveys.
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