Many stone tools are reduced during use. Degree and pattern of reduction influence tool size and form, complicating typological assignment but allowing measurement and analysis ofcuration. We apply simple allometric reduction measures — ratios of changing length, mass or surface area to essentially constant thickness — to a set of experimental Folsom bifaces that were used at dart points and reworked and reduced during use. All measures correlate with degree of reduction from known original size; the simple ratio of length to thickness (L/T) correlates best and distinguishes between earlier and later episodes of use and reduction. Although calibrating variation in allometric reduction measures to common scales remains a challenge, ratios ca...
Bordes’ typology has been in use for many years and is widely applied in studies of Early and Middle...
Morphometrics analysis of stone tools emphasizes the use of metric data to capture information about...
This dissertation has two goals. The first is to provide a theoretical framework for a dynamic, morp...
Stone tools were knapped, not built. This truism means that tools were reduced from larger pieces in...
Stone tools were knapped, not built. This truism means that tools were reduced from larger pieces in...
Stone tools represent the largest source of information about past human behaviors on the planet. Mu...
Estimating the extent of reduction intensity on lithic artefacts has become a key goal of lithic ana...
The interpretation of handaxe shape is one of the most prominent questions in Acheulean archaeologic...
This study applies a new three-dimensional measurement technique to determine the major source of va...
This dissertation presents a model of biface reduction to account for variability in Acheulian bifac...
A growing number of techniques have been proposed in recent years to quantify how much retouch has b...
This study applies a new three-dimensional measurement technique to determine the major source of va...
hre bifa ona s ca ime derp pretative breadth of current models explaining morphological variation in...
A growing number of techniques have been proposed in recent years to quantify how much retouch has b...
North American lithic analysis often assigns biface preforms to discrete, successive stages defined ...
Bordes’ typology has been in use for many years and is widely applied in studies of Early and Middle...
Morphometrics analysis of stone tools emphasizes the use of metric data to capture information about...
This dissertation has two goals. The first is to provide a theoretical framework for a dynamic, morp...
Stone tools were knapped, not built. This truism means that tools were reduced from larger pieces in...
Stone tools were knapped, not built. This truism means that tools were reduced from larger pieces in...
Stone tools represent the largest source of information about past human behaviors on the planet. Mu...
Estimating the extent of reduction intensity on lithic artefacts has become a key goal of lithic ana...
The interpretation of handaxe shape is one of the most prominent questions in Acheulean archaeologic...
This study applies a new three-dimensional measurement technique to determine the major source of va...
This dissertation presents a model of biface reduction to account for variability in Acheulian bifac...
A growing number of techniques have been proposed in recent years to quantify how much retouch has b...
This study applies a new three-dimensional measurement technique to determine the major source of va...
hre bifa ona s ca ime derp pretative breadth of current models explaining morphological variation in...
A growing number of techniques have been proposed in recent years to quantify how much retouch has b...
North American lithic analysis often assigns biface preforms to discrete, successive stages defined ...
Bordes’ typology has been in use for many years and is widely applied in studies of Early and Middle...
Morphometrics analysis of stone tools emphasizes the use of metric data to capture information about...
This dissertation has two goals. The first is to provide a theoretical framework for a dynamic, morp...