“…Sometimes these occur in the absence of handaxes in the same raw material, further demonstrating the mobility of these elements (Soressi, 2002;Faivre, 2006;Wragg Sykes, 2010). Habitual resharpening and repair, alongside other secondary modifications (including percussion marks), suggest that handaxes formed a similarly dynamic part of the late Middle Palaeolithic toolkit (Soressi, 2002;Launay and Molines, 2005;Claud, 2008;Wragg Sykes, 2009Thi ebaut et al, 2010;Iovita, 2014). For example, some bifaces were recycled and reused as cores, e.g.…”