Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Breaking of Ochred Pebble Tools as Part of Funerary Ritual in the Arene Candide Epigravettian Cemetery

View through CrossRef
We present the analysis of 29 human-transported limestone pebbles found during recent excavations (2009–11) in the Final Epigravettian levels at the Caverna delle Arene Candide, Italy. All pebbles are oblong, most bear traces of red ochre and many appear intentionally broken. Macroscopic analyses demonstrate morphological similarity with pebbles used as grave goods in the Final Epigravettian necropolis excavated at the site in the 1940s. Mediterranean beaches are the most plausible source for the pebbles, which were carefully selected for their specific shape. Microscopic observation of the pebbles’ surfaces shows traces of ochre located on the edges and/or centres of most pebbles. A breakage experiment suggests that many pebbles were broken with intentional, direct blows to their centre. We propose that these pebbles were used to apply ochre ritually to the individuals buried at the site, and that some were subsequently ritually ‘killed’. This study emphasizes the importance of studying artefacts that are often ignored due to their similarities to simple broken rocks. It also provides a method to study pebbles as a distinct artefact category, and shows that even broken parts should be studied to understand the story told by such objects in the context of prehistoric human social systems.
Title: The Breaking of Ochred Pebble Tools as Part of Funerary Ritual in the Arene Candide Epigravettian Cemetery
Description:
We present the analysis of 29 human-transported limestone pebbles found during recent excavations (2009–11) in the Final Epigravettian levels at the Caverna delle Arene Candide, Italy.
All pebbles are oblong, most bear traces of red ochre and many appear intentionally broken.
Macroscopic analyses demonstrate morphological similarity with pebbles used as grave goods in the Final Epigravettian necropolis excavated at the site in the 1940s.
Mediterranean beaches are the most plausible source for the pebbles, which were carefully selected for their specific shape.
Microscopic observation of the pebbles’ surfaces shows traces of ochre located on the edges and/or centres of most pebbles.
A breakage experiment suggests that many pebbles were broken with intentional, direct blows to their centre.
We propose that these pebbles were used to apply ochre ritually to the individuals buried at the site, and that some were subsequently ritually ‘killed’.
This study emphasizes the importance of studying artefacts that are often ignored due to their similarities to simple broken rocks.
It also provides a method to study pebbles as a distinct artefact category, and shows that even broken parts should be studied to understand the story told by such objects in the context of prehistoric human social systems.

Related Results

LA QUESTION DE L’EPIGRAVETTIEN ORIENTAL
LA QUESTION DE L’EPIGRAVETTIEN ORIENTAL
he designation, under the name of Epigravettian, of all industries in Central and Eastern Europe from the last glacial maximum and up to the end of isotopic stage 2, masks the vari...
Study on the Seismic Effect of the Pebble Soil Site in the Zhongwei Basin
Study on the Seismic Effect of the Pebble Soil Site in the Zhongwei Basin
Based on a large amount of drilling and geophysical exploration work in the Zhongwei Basin, and combined with the collected borehole data of a seismic safety assessment, this paper...
A multimethod analysis for tracing Gravettian red ochre provenance at Arene Candide Cave (NW Italy)
A multimethod analysis for tracing Gravettian red ochre provenance at Arene Candide Cave (NW Italy)
ABSTRACTArene Candide Cave, a key site for Western Mediterranean prehistory, is famous for the discovery of the richly adorned Mid–Upper Palaeolithic burial of the ‘Young Prince’ a...
The Black Mass as Play: Dennis Wheatley's The Devil Rides Out
The Black Mass as Play: Dennis Wheatley's The Devil Rides Out
Literature—at least serious literature—is something that we work at. This is especially true within the academy. Literature departments are places where workers labour over texts c...
Planetary core formation via multispecies pebble accretion
Planetary core formation via multispecies pebble accretion
ABSTRACT In the general classical picture of pebble-based core growth, planetary cores grow by accretion of single pebble species. The growing planet may reach the s...
Pebble Macro Tree Transducers with Strong Pebble Handling
Pebble Macro Tree Transducers with Strong Pebble Handling
We consider pebble macro tree transducers with call-by-name semantics and strong pebble handling. The latter means that the last dropped pebble can be lifted regardless of the posi...
The Cross-Flow Mixing Analysis of Quasi-Static Pebble Flow in Pebble Bed Reactor
The Cross-Flow Mixing Analysis of Quasi-Static Pebble Flow in Pebble Bed Reactor
In the pebble bed reactor, large number of fuel pebbles’ movement law and moving state can affect the reactor’s design, operation and safety directly. Therefore the pebble flow, wh...
Multi-fluid hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary planet formation via pebble accretion
Multi-fluid hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary planet formation via pebble accretion
Context. Since the detection of the first known transiting circumbinary planet (CBP), Kepler-16b,by the Kepler mission, a total pf 14 CBPs have been detected, raising questions abo...

Back to Top