[Bonetools] Neolithic Bone objects

Heidi Luik heidi.luik at mail.ee
Fri Mar 22 16:00:26 CET 2013


Dear Francois,
Thank you, it is very interesting. If you will send a paper, we can scan it and make pdf.
Heidi
Postal address:
Heidi Luik and Mirja Ots
Institute of History, Tallinn University
Ruutli 6, 10130 Tallinn, Estonia


--- Algne kiri ---
Kellelt: François Poplin <poplin at mnhn.fr>
Teema: Re: [Bonetools] Neolithic Bone objects
Kellele: Mailing list for archaeologists of the research group for the study of	object and waste of bone,	antler. ivory and horn. <bonetools at listserv.niif.hu>
Reply-To: Mailing list for archaeologists of the research group for the	study of object and waste of bone,	antler. ivory and horn. <bonetools at listserv.niif.hu>

> 
>   
>     
>   
>   
>     Le 22/03/2013 13:03, Heidi Luik a écrit :
>     
>       Dear all,
>       My colleague Mirja Ots asked me to forward to the list a question
>       about
>       bone objects from the Neolithic site of Tamula. Please send answer
>       to the
>       list and to her e-mail address also.
>       Thank you in advance,
>       Heidi
>       
>       From the Tamula settlement site in South Estonia, dated to
>       3100–1650 BC
>       (from the same site burials dating from 4700–3400 BC have been
>       discovered) more than a hundred bone fragments with transverse
>       grooves
>       have been found. The bones are mostly split long bones and the
>       grooves
>       spread in a fan shape. So far archaeologists have suggested that
>       these
>       are artefacts used for straining or spooling cord made from
>       tendons.
>       We would be very grateful for any parallels and suggestions about
>       their
>       function. 
>       Thank you in advance! 
>       Mirja Ots mirja.ots at tlu.ee
>       
>       
>       
>       _______________________________________________
> Bonetools mailing list
> Bonetools at listserv.niif.hu
> https://listserv.niif.hu/mailman/listinfo/bonetools
> 
>     
>     I gave a paper "Deux cas de débitage des matières dures d'origine
>     animale" (1974), where I saw (partially) hippo ivory and even enamel
>     (ie. a lower canine) with sand and tendon (David's deer), then with
>     sand and string. Do you want I send you the paper, and you make a
>     pdf for all ? It was to reproduce a so sawn tusk from predynastic
>     Egypt kept at the Musée des Antiquités nationales
>     (Saint-Grermain-en-Laye).
>     
>     More in a certain time ; I have something else to send now.
>     
>     Your's
>     
>     
>     -- 
> François POPLIN 
> 
> Directeur honoraire de l’UMR 7209 Archéozoologie, Archébotanique : sociétés, pratiques et environnements 
> 
> Responsable du Séminaire d'Anthropozoologie 
> 
> Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 
> CP 56 
> Ancien Laboratoire d’Anatomie comparée 
> 55, rue de Buffon 
> 75005 Paris 
> 01 40 79 33 11 
> fax ------ 33 14 
> 
> francoispoplin.blogspot.com
> 
>   
> 
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
> --------------050300030305070700090608
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
> 
> Le 22/03/2013 13:03, Heidi Luik a =E9crit :
> > Dear all,
> > My colleague Mirja Ots asked me to forward to the list a question=20
> > about bone objects from the Neolithic site of Tamula. Please send=20
> > answer to the list and to her e-mail address also.
> > Thank you in advance,
> > Heidi
> >
> > From the Tamula settlement site in South Estonia, dated to 3100--1650=20
> > BC (from the same site burials dating from 4700--3400 BC have been=20
> > discovered) more than a hundred bone fragments with transverse grooves=20
> > have been found. The bones are mostly split long bones and the grooves=20
> > spread in a fan shape. So far archaeologists have suggested that these=20
> > are artefacts used for straining or spooling cord made from tendons.
> > We would be very grateful for any parallels and suggestions about=20
> > their function.
> > Thank you in advance!
> > Mirja Ots mirja.ots at tlu.ee 
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Bonetools mailing list
> > Bonetools at listserv.niif.hu
> > https://listserv.niif.hu/mailman/listinfo/bonetools
> I gave a paper "Deux cas de d=E9bitage des mati=E8res dures d'origine=20
> animale" (1974), where I saw (partially) hippo ivory and even enamel=20
> (ie. a lower canine) with sand and tendon (David's deer), then with sand=20
> and string. Do you want I send you the paper, and you make a pdf for all=20
> ? It was to reproduce a so sawn tusk from predynastic Egypt kept at the=20
> Mus=E9e des Antiquit=E9s nationales (Saint-Grermain-en-Laye).
> 
> More in a certain time ; I have something else to send now.
> 
> Your's
> 
> 
> --=20
> Fran=E7ois POPLIN
> 
> Directeur honoraire de l'UMR 7209 Arch=E9ozoologie, Arch=E9botanique : so=
> ci=E9t=E9s, pratiques et environnements
> 
> Responsable du S=E9minaire d'Anthropozoologie
> 
> Mus=E9um national d'Histoire naturelle
> CP 56
> Ancien Laboratoire d'Anatomie compar=E9e
> 55, rue de Buffon
> 75005 Paris
> 01 40 79 33 11
> fax ------ 33 14
> 
> francoispoplin.blogspot.com
> 
> 
> --------------050300030305070700090608
> Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
> 
> 
>   
>     
>   
>   
>     Le 22/03/2013 13:03, Heidi Luik a écrit :
>     
>       Dear all,
>       My colleague Mirja Ots asked me to forward to the list a question
>       about
>       bone objects from the Neolithic site of Tamula. Please send answer
>       to the
>       list and to her e-mail address also.
>       Thank you in advance,
>       Heidi
>       
>       From the Tamula settlement site in South Estonia, dated to
>       3100–1650 BC
>       (from the same site burials dating from 4700–3400 BC have been
>       discovered) more than a hundred bone fragments with transverse
>       grooves
>       have been found. The bones are mostly split long bones and the
>       grooves
>       spread in a fan shape. So far archaeologists have suggested that
>       these
>       are artefacts used for straining or spooling cord made from
>       tendons.
>       We would be very grateful for any parallels and suggestions about
>       their
>       function. 
>       Thank you in advance! 
>       Mirja Ots mirja.ots at tlu.ee
>       
>       
>       
>       _______________________________________________
> Bonetools mailing list
> Bonetools at listserv.niif.hu
> https://listserv.niif.hu/mailman/listinfo/bonetools
> 
>     
>     I gave a paper "Deux cas de débitage des matières dures d'origine
>     animale" (1974), where I saw (partially) hippo ivory and even enamel
>     (ie. a lower canine) with sand and tendon (David's deer), then with
>     sand and string. Do you want I send you the paper, and you make a
>     pdf for all ? It was to reproduce a so sawn tusk from predynastic
>     Egypt kept at the Musée des Antiquités nationales
>     (Saint-Grermain-en-Laye).
>     
>     More in a certain time ; I have something else to send now.
>     
>     Your's
>     
>     
>     -- 
> François POPLIN 
> 
> Directeur honoraire de l’UMR 7209 Archéozoologie, Archébotanique : sociétés, pratiques et environnements 
> 
> Responsable du Séminaire d'Anthropozoologie 
> 
> Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 
> CP 56 
> Ancien Laboratoire d’Anatomie comparée 
> 55, rue de Buffon 
> 75005 Paris 
> 01 40 79 33 11 
> fax ------ 33 14 
> 
> francoispoplin.blogspot.com
> 
>   
> 
> 
> --------------050300030305070700090608--
> 
> 


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