2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2012.11.003
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Geochemical discrimination of basaltic sources as a tool for provenance analyses of bifacial tools in the southern Levant: first results from the Jezreel Valley, Israel

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Cited by 20 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…The use of a variety of raw materials to manufacture a specific tool type characterized the production of bifacial tools in the southern Levant. Although primarily made of flint (e.g., Barkai 2005), some were produced on basaltic rocks, limestone, and other more 'exotic' raw materials (e.g., Garfinkel & Dag 2006;Rosenberg et al 2008;Rosenberg & Gopher 2010;Gluhak & Rosenberg 2013;Rosenberg and Gluhak 2015;Vardi 2015).…”
Section: Raw Materials and Bifacial Tools In The Southern Levantmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The use of a variety of raw materials to manufacture a specific tool type characterized the production of bifacial tools in the southern Levant. Although primarily made of flint (e.g., Barkai 2005), some were produced on basaltic rocks, limestone, and other more 'exotic' raw materials (e.g., Garfinkel & Dag 2006;Rosenberg et al 2008;Rosenberg & Gopher 2010;Gluhak & Rosenberg 2013;Rosenberg and Gluhak 2015;Vardi 2015).…”
Section: Raw Materials and Bifacial Tools In The Southern Levantmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heavily eroded and decalcified flint items are similar to Palaeolithic material in the region (e.g., Olami 1984). The only reliable information concerning the dating of the Giv'at Kipod quarry and production site is based on the provenance study (Gluhak & Rosenberg 2013), which identified bifacials made of Giv'at Kipod basanite in a series of sites spanning from the PPNA to the Late Neolithic-Early Chalcolithic period.…”
Section: Giv'at Kipodmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One such trend that was reflected in the papers presented during the 1 st AGSTR meeting at the University of Haifa, and visible in this JLS issue, is an increase in the number of papers dealing with ground stone quarries, production, and design (e.g. Another trend gaining strength is a focus on geochemistry and provenance, distribution, and exchange (e.g., Williams-Thorpe 1988;Philip & Williams-Thorpe 2001;Watts et al 2004;Antonelli & Lazzarini 2010;Tsoraki 2011;Rosenberg & Golani 2012;Gluhak & Rosenberg 2013;Gluhak & Schwall 2015;Gluhak et al 2016;Reniere et al 2016). Efforts to understand the functions of stone items continue through increasingly sophisticated functional use-wear analyses (e.g., Hamon 2008;Risch 2008;Verbaas & van Gijn 2008;Delgado-Raack et al 2009;Bofill 2012;Adams 2014;Asryan et al 2014;Adams 2015;Delgado-Rack & Risch 2016;Groman-Yaroslavski et al 2016;Hamon 2016) and residue studies (e.g., Yohe II et al 1991;Hard et al 1996;Fullagar & Field 1997;Veth et al 1997;Piperno & Holst 1998;Perry 2004;Aranguren et al 2007;Barton 2007;Fullagar et al 2008;Buonasera 2016;Öğüt 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%