This paper focuses on the spatial distribution of bone tool production waste from two Mesolithic sites in Sweden, Ringsjöholm and Strandvägen, with well-preserved faunal remains including bone and antler artifacts. Local production on both sites has generated a variety of identifiable waste products deriving from complete chains of production, including unmodified bones, debitage and finished products. Identified categories include: blanks, removed epiphyses, bone flakes, and preforms. Identification of species shows that antler and bone from red deer were the preferred raw materials. Spatial statistical analyses confirm that different stages of bone tool production were organized within separate areas of the sites and that larger items wer...
The aim of this paper has been to undertake an osteological investigation of an unresearched bone as...
The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Mesolithic archaeological assembla...
International audienceRecent investigations on the Mesolithic bone industry have been conducted at t...
This paper focuses on the spatial distribution of bone tool production waste from two Mesolithic sit...
Osteoarchaeological materials are influenced by many consecutive factors, from human hunting strateg...
International audienceThe present paper discusses the potential value, as part of a mortuary deposit...
Orphaned osseous tools are very often perceived as having a high aesthetic value, but are usually un...
This thesis examines the use of various osseous raw materials in craft activities in the Mälaren reg...
Bone fishhooks have occasionally been retrieved from bone assemblages at coastal sites dating to the...
The beginning of the Mesolithic in northern Europe, known in Denmark as the Maglemosian (8500-6550 c...
This text discusses a small assemblage of flint from an excavation of a Mesolithic site in the Småla...
This text discusses a small assemblage of flint from an excavation of a Mesolithic site in the Småla...
The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Mesolithic archaeological assembla...
The aim of this paper has been to undertake an osteological investigation of an unresearched bone as...
The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Mesolithic archaeological assembla...
International audienceRecent investigations on the Mesolithic bone industry have been conducted at t...
This paper focuses on the spatial distribution of bone tool production waste from two Mesolithic sit...
Osteoarchaeological materials are influenced by many consecutive factors, from human hunting strateg...
International audienceThe present paper discusses the potential value, as part of a mortuary deposit...
Orphaned osseous tools are very often perceived as having a high aesthetic value, but are usually un...
This thesis examines the use of various osseous raw materials in craft activities in the Mälaren reg...
Bone fishhooks have occasionally been retrieved from bone assemblages at coastal sites dating to the...
The beginning of the Mesolithic in northern Europe, known in Denmark as the Maglemosian (8500-6550 c...
This text discusses a small assemblage of flint from an excavation of a Mesolithic site in the Småla...
This text discusses a small assemblage of flint from an excavation of a Mesolithic site in the Småla...
The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Mesolithic archaeological assembla...
The aim of this paper has been to undertake an osteological investigation of an unresearched bone as...
The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Mesolithic archaeological assembla...
International audienceRecent investigations on the Mesolithic bone industry have been conducted at t...