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Bromme-type tanged point

Part of the collection: Stone Age

Popularization note

The Bromme-type tanged point was found in the Krzekowo district in Szczecin in 1968. It was made on a short, elongated blade, a half-finished piece chipped off a larger lump of local Middle Turonian flint, as evidenced by the presence of bryozoans’ skeletons embedded in the flint mass. The preserved technical traces suggest that the so-called soft pestle of bone, antler or soft rock such as sandstone was used to break off the blade. The technique was characteristic of the Late Palaeolithic population representing the so-called Bromme culture. Bromme tanged points are - depending on their size - spearheads, javelins or arrows, used by prehistoric hunters to hunt moose, reindeer and perhaps the last representatives of the giant deer (Megaloceros), which was an endangered species at that time. They are characteristic of the Bromme culture, belonging to the circle of the so-called leaf cultures, whose representatives used the characteristic willow leaf-shaped arrowheads and arrowheads with distinct handles. In addition to the Bromme culture, hunter-gatherers inhabiting a forest environment, the Ahrensburg and Swiderian cultures belong to the same circle - hunters of the tundra, stepo-tundra and parkland tundra zones.

Michał Adamczyk

The Bromme-type tanged point was found in the Krzekowo district in Szczecin in 1968. It was made on a short, elongated blade, a half-finished piece chipped off a larger lump of local Middle Turonian flint, as evidenced by the presence of bryozoans’ skeletons embedded in the flint mass. The preserved technical traces suggest that the so-called soft pestle of bone, antler or soft rock such as sandstone was used to break off the blade. The technique was characteristic of the Late Palaeolithic population representing the so-called Bromme culture. Bromme tanged points are - depending on their size - spearheads, javelins or arrows, used by prehistoric hunters to hunt moose, reindeer and perhaps the last representatives of the giant deer (Megaloceros), which was an endangered species at that time. They are characteristic of the Bromme culture, belonging to the circle of the so-called leaf cultures, whose representatives used the characteristic willow leaf-shaped arrowheads and arrowheads with distinct handles. In addition to the Bromme culture, hunter-gatherers inhabiting a forest environment, the Ahrensburg and Swiderian cultures belong to the same circle - hunters of the tundra, stepo-tundra and parkland tundra zones.

Michał Adamczyk

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 5 cm, width: 1.9 cm

Object type

tanged point, arrowhead

Technique

carving, peeling, soft masher carving

Material

flint, stone

Origin / acquisition method

donation

Creation time / dating

11500 p.n.e. — 10800 p.n.e.

Creation / finding place

znalezienie: Krzekowo, część miasta Szczecin (województwo zachodniopomorskie)

Owner

National Museum in Szczecin

Identification number

MNS/A/6310/1

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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