“…Wool may have been obtained on a domestic scale by communities or kinship groups raising small flocks of sheep. In this sense, the absence of large flocks, necessary for a supra-domestic consumption (Sabatini & Bergerbrant, 2019), leads us to propose that wool production was limited to the household sphere and less developed than the production of bast fibres. We also contend that specialized labour did not exist in Bronze Age eastern Iberia, nor did the levels of production and exchange operate on the same scale as, for example, in Mesopotamia (McCorriston, 1997;Algaze, 2008), Egypt (Lucas & Harris, 1962;Vogelsang-Eastwood, 1992), the Aegean (Killen, 2007;Militello, 2007), or even some parts of Europe, such as northern Italy (Sabatini et al, 2018).…”