The results of a petrographic and geochemical study carried out on archeological grindstones allow to provide new constraints on protohistoric commercial exchanges over the Mediterranean area. Eleven grindstones, discovered in an archeological site located in Milazzo (Messina, Sicily) and dated from the Early Bronze Age, have been investigated by geochemical and petrographic techniques. The raw materials are mainly volcanic rocks characterized by calc-alkaline and K-alkaline affinities with volcanic arc geochemical signature. Only one sample, made of basalt belonging to the Naalkaline series, shows an intraplate signature. The comparison with the available literature data for similar rocks allowed constraining the volcanic origi...
This paper discusses the first geochemical characterization of obsidian fragments from the prehistor...
The study of prehistoric trade and exchange networks in the Western Mediterranean is directly linked...
In Sardinia, polished stone axes appear in early Neolithic communities (VI millennium B.C.) and are...
Abstract A petrographic and geochemical study of several volcanic millstones, representative of 119 ...
The petrochemical study of millstones can contribute to improve the archaeological research into rec...
The main quarrying area of the Mulargia ignimbrite, used mainly to produce rotary millstones during ...
This archaeometric study was focused on 28 grey to dark-grey lava artifacts found in Ustica Island (...
The main quarrying area of the Mulargia ignimbrite, used mainly to produce hourglass-shaped millston...
The Morgantina archaeological area, inhabited from the Early Bronze Age, had its widest expansion fr...
A comprehensive investigation and classification of volcanic millstones of the Greek and Roman perio...
The present study deals with the analysis of several fragments of grinding stones from excavations a...
An archaeometric study of all the Roman millstones preserved today in the National Archaeological Mu...
The paper illustrates the results of an archaeometric project on the raw material characterization o...
In this study we applied a multidisciplinary approach, coupling geophysical and geochemical measure...
A petrographic characterization has been used here, for the first time, in the study of lithic raw m...
This paper discusses the first geochemical characterization of obsidian fragments from the prehistor...
The study of prehistoric trade and exchange networks in the Western Mediterranean is directly linked...
In Sardinia, polished stone axes appear in early Neolithic communities (VI millennium B.C.) and are...
Abstract A petrographic and geochemical study of several volcanic millstones, representative of 119 ...
The petrochemical study of millstones can contribute to improve the archaeological research into rec...
The main quarrying area of the Mulargia ignimbrite, used mainly to produce rotary millstones during ...
This archaeometric study was focused on 28 grey to dark-grey lava artifacts found in Ustica Island (...
The main quarrying area of the Mulargia ignimbrite, used mainly to produce hourglass-shaped millston...
The Morgantina archaeological area, inhabited from the Early Bronze Age, had its widest expansion fr...
A comprehensive investigation and classification of volcanic millstones of the Greek and Roman perio...
The present study deals with the analysis of several fragments of grinding stones from excavations a...
An archaeometric study of all the Roman millstones preserved today in the National Archaeological Mu...
The paper illustrates the results of an archaeometric project on the raw material characterization o...
In this study we applied a multidisciplinary approach, coupling geophysical and geochemical measure...
A petrographic characterization has been used here, for the first time, in the study of lithic raw m...
This paper discusses the first geochemical characterization of obsidian fragments from the prehistor...
The study of prehistoric trade and exchange networks in the Western Mediterranean is directly linked...
In Sardinia, polished stone axes appear in early Neolithic communities (VI millennium B.C.) and are...