The commission Bone Artefacts of the Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques (UISPP) held its first workshop from the 2. – 3. March 2017 at the University of Trnava, Slovakia. The workshop was organized by Éva David and Erik Hnrciarik.
Review of the workshop:
Fontana, Laure (2017): Contact, circulation et échange dans les sociétés du passé: contributions de l’étude des matières dures animales, université de Trnava (Slovaquie), 2-3 mars 2017. – Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française 114(2), 386-387
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Proceedings have been published in the volume
David, Éva & Hrnčiarik, Erik (2023):
Contact, Circulation, Exchange. Proceedings of the Modified Bone & Shell UISPP Commission Conference (2-3 March 2017, University of Trnava)
Oxford: Archaeopress
ISBN 9781803275956
Summary
Contact, Circulation, Exchange collects ten articles focusing on worked hard materials of animal origin (shell, tusk, bone, antler) ranging chronologically from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Middle Ages. The authors have varied academic backgrounds that enhance the archaeological analyses carried out, often at first hand, on numerous collections from the Old and New Worlds. Evidence of contact between past populations with distinct technical traditions is found in the dynamic imposed by using certain craft methods, such as stone pressure flaking (7,000 BC). Another kind of stimulus may have given rise to a tool with a specifi c use in the migration period, the sumak (300 BC-600 AD). Apart from the attraction of a novel technique or a new piece of equipment, it was the attraction of the raw material and the hunting sites that formed the guiding principle behind the mobility of groups within a territory, in early (35,000-12,000 BC) as in recent prehistory (up to 1500 AD). Weaponry, adornments and/or the animal species used are then powerful markers of the extent of trade routes and networks, and even of craftsmanship when related to village settlements (4,500-2,500 BC). In antiquity, the exotic rather than exogenous origin of materials was used to develop unique skills in the service of cults. In the diff usion of figurines, representation took precedence over the unique or sought-after nature of the material, whose origin remained nonetheless animal.
The editors and authors of this book are all members of the Modified Bone & Shell Commission of the UISPP. The aim of this commission is to promote and disseminate knowledge about the use and manufacture of bone materials in past societies. Éva David, who heads the commission and holds a doctorate in comparative sociology, is developing research into prehistoric bone industries at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), where she is also editor of a collection on the anthropology of Stone Age techniques. Erik Hnrčiarik, who holds a doctorate in classical archaeology, recently published the Roman bone artefacts from Iža excavated by the Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences.
Content
- Heckel, Claire & Wolf, Sybille: The circulation of ornaments in Aurignacian contexts
- Fontana, Laure & Chauvière, Francois-Xavier: The nomadism cycle of recent palaeolithic societies from reindeer antler economy
- David, Éva / Sørensen, Mikkel / Diemer, Simon / Santaniello, Fabio / Nielsen, Svein Vatsvåg: Maglemosian in contact — The disruptive invention of stone pressure flaking on the curve crutch 7000 cal BC
- Macāne, Aija / Kostyleva, Elena / Nordqvist, Kerkko: Long-distance circulation of exotic teeth and non-local minerals in forested north eastern Europe 4th millennium BC
- Michalczewski, Krzysztof / Borodovskiy, Andriey P. / Oleszczak, Łukasz: The bone sumak for infant care, an invention from southern Siberian nomadism or contact with the Hunnic tribes?
- Nováková, Lucia: Making gods in ancient Greece: rituals and cult images development through tracing ivory use in statuary tradition
- Houmard, Claire & Bitrian, Antoine: Parcours de mobilité dans l’Arctique aux temps Thuléens (~1200-1900 AD)
- Langley, Michelle C. & O’Connor, Sue: Bone and tooth technology in Australia: recent discoveries and living traditions
- Gercek, Ayca: Are there any cultural reflexions on Roman bone hairpins with female bust?
- Hull, Jennifer: Bone weaponry of later prehistoric southern Vietnam
The book can be ordered via Archaeopress.
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