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Conical chipboard core

Part of the collection: Stone Age

Popularization note

The conical core was found near Drzewica, the Kamień district, probably at the end of the 19th century, and bought by Gesellschaft für Pommersche Geschichte und Altertumskunde from Loth in Sassnitz in 1896. The core, a lump of flint designed and prepared for breaking off half-silver then used to manufacture tools, has a circular splinter with 12 negatives of long, straight chips. Originally, it was much larger, but as it was exploited, its circumference reduced. The core heel, i.e., the surface struck, was carefully freshened, i.e., adjusted so that the correct angle between the heel and the splint was maintained. The freshening of the heel is typical of the technological traditions of the people of the eastern Baltic region. Transformations in the technology of obtaining semi-raw material for tool making, involving the so-called intermediary, mark the middle Mesolithic period. The technique consists of using antler or bone as an intermediary between the core and the pestle. Obtaining long, straight, and regular blades was easier this way than with a direct blow with a hard or soft pestle.

Michał Adamczyk

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 8.4 cm, width: 4.3 cm

Object type

lithic core, production waste

Technique

intermediary carving, carving, hard masher carving

Material

flint, stone

Origin / acquisition method

acquisition

Creation time / dating

7800 p.n.e. — 7000 p.n.e.

Creation / finding place

znalezienie: Drzewica (województwo zachodniopomorskie)

Owner

National Museum in Szczecin

Identification number

MNS/A/5919

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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