Published January 2, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

THE DEVELOPING CRAFT OF BONE TOOL TECHNOLOGY AT CHALCOLITHIC TELEILAT GHASSUL, JORDAN

  • 1. Petra College for Tourism and Archaeology, Al Hussein Bin Talal University, 71110 Ma'an, Jordan.
  • 2. NEAF, SOPHI, A14, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
  • 3. University of Ferrara, Department of Humanities, Corso Ercole I d'Este 32 – 44121 Ferrara, Italy

Description

The Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic site of Tuleilat Ghassul is located on the northeastern corner of the Dead Sea and was occupied throughout the Fifth Millennium BCE. It is the type-site of the Ghassulian culture and, covering 20 hectares, is one of the largest Chalcolithic sites in the southern Levant. This paper analyses the worked bone objects from Hennessy’s (1967-77) and Bourke’s (1994-99) Sydney University excavations at Ghassul, currently stored in the Salt, Amman Citadel and Yarmouk University museums in Jordan. The aim is to investigate the production methods and describe specific form/function combinations of worked bone tools at Ghassul and to contextualize the assemblage through comparative analyses with contemporary artefacts recovered in Jordan. Results display a variety bone objects categories like pointed tools, spatulas and decorated objects. Stereomicroscopic analysis documents different production processes on bone objects surfaces. Bone objects at Teleilat Ghassul illustrate the development of bone crafting during Chalcolithic period.

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