P. Acquafredda, Vincenzo Festa, F. Micheletti, A. Fornelli
{"title":"通过微创或绝对无损的岩石考古调查确定新石器时代石器的来源:卡拉布里亚(意大利南部)的一些案例","authors":"P. Acquafredda, Vincenzo Festa, F. Micheletti, A. Fornelli","doi":"10.3390/heritage7020030","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the present work, more than one hundred and thirty lithic artefacts rediscovered in several archaeological sites dating from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Middle Ages from Calabria (Southern Italy) were petroarchaeometrically characterised through minimally invasive techniques. In more detail, 110 specimens were found in the Grotta della Monaca site (Sant’Agata di Esaro), and the other 23 belong to a collection kept in the Museo Nazionale Preistorico ed Etnografico “Luigi Pigorini” (Roma), coming from several localities (Longobucco, Spezzano della Sila, Cicala, Gimigliano, Roccaforte del Greco, and Bova). For preservation needs, 2 small axes in polished stone and 2 obsidians collected from Grotta della Monaca were analysed by absolutely non-destructive techniques. Optical and electron microscopic investigations, sometimes integrated with wavelength-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction spectrometry, allowed us to ascertain that the source area of all the lithic tools was in Calabria, except for obsidians, which come from the island of Lipari (Messina, Southern Italy). For a small number of particularly favourable cases, it was possible to define with great precision the outcrop area of the used rocks given their textural and mineralogical features. The specific source area contained a pickaxe originating from Cetraro–Fuscaldo metabasalt (lawsonite–albite facies) outcrops and two small axes in polished stone, one derived from migmatitic metapelites from Palmi and the other from meta-ultramafic rocks from Curinga. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在本次研究中,通过微创技术对在卡拉布里亚(意大利南部)几个考古遗址中重新发现的 130 多件从旧石器时代上古时期到中世纪的石器进行了岩石年龄测定。更详细地说,其中 110 件标本是在 Grotta della Monaca 遗址(Sant'Agata di Esaro)发现的,另外 23 件属于 "Luigi Pigorini "国家史前与人类博物馆(罗马)的藏品,来自多个地方(Longobucco、Spezzano della Sila、Cicala、Gimigliano、Roccaforte del Greco 和 Bova)。出于保存的需要,我们采用绝对非破坏性的技术对从 Grotta della Monaca 采集的 2 件磨光石质小斧和 2 件黑曜石进行了分析。光学和电子显微镜研究,有时与波长色散 X 射线荧光光谱学和 X 射线衍射光谱学相结合,使我们能够确定所有石器的原产地都在卡拉布里亚,但黑曜石除外,因为黑曜石来自利帕里岛(意大利南部墨西拿)。在少数特别有利的情况下,根据所使用岩石的纹理和矿物特征,可以非常精确地确定其出露地区。具体的源区包括一把产自 Cetraro-Fuscaldo 偏闪长岩(lawsonite-albite 岩层)露头的镐和两把磨光石质的小斧头,其中一把产自帕尔米的偏闪长岩,另一把产自 Curinga 的偏闪长岩。对所使用岩性的选择(较硬或较软)必须与人类对石器的使用有关。
Provenance of Neolithic Stone Artefacts through Minimally Invasive or Absolutely Non-Destructive Petroarchaeometric Investigations: Some Cases from Calabria (Southern Italy)
In the present work, more than one hundred and thirty lithic artefacts rediscovered in several archaeological sites dating from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Middle Ages from Calabria (Southern Italy) were petroarchaeometrically characterised through minimally invasive techniques. In more detail, 110 specimens were found in the Grotta della Monaca site (Sant’Agata di Esaro), and the other 23 belong to a collection kept in the Museo Nazionale Preistorico ed Etnografico “Luigi Pigorini” (Roma), coming from several localities (Longobucco, Spezzano della Sila, Cicala, Gimigliano, Roccaforte del Greco, and Bova). For preservation needs, 2 small axes in polished stone and 2 obsidians collected from Grotta della Monaca were analysed by absolutely non-destructive techniques. Optical and electron microscopic investigations, sometimes integrated with wavelength-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction spectrometry, allowed us to ascertain that the source area of all the lithic tools was in Calabria, except for obsidians, which come from the island of Lipari (Messina, Southern Italy). For a small number of particularly favourable cases, it was possible to define with great precision the outcrop area of the used rocks given their textural and mineralogical features. The specific source area contained a pickaxe originating from Cetraro–Fuscaldo metabasalt (lawsonite–albite facies) outcrops and two small axes in polished stone, one derived from migmatitic metapelites from Palmi and the other from meta-ultramafic rocks from Curinga. The choice of the used lithologies, harder or softer, had to be linked to the use that humans had to make of the lithic artefacts.