[Bonetools] Roman bone pin work waste
Alice Choyke
choyke at ceu.hu
Fri May 9 19:07:03 CEST 2014
Dear Stephen,
Are you thinking about looking at those damned pins from the point of
view of some sort of micro-use use wear analysis. I always found the
typology of pins rather suspect as it seems to be rather rigid and does not
look at the pins as having any sort of active biography from selection of
raw material (where available) manufacture, use, re-use, curation and
discard stages.
Cheers!
Alice
On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 6:55 PM, <sjgreep at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Lena,
>
> I,ve a lot of information on British pin manufacturing sites, but from
> your post it looks like you have a great assemblage. As Ian Ridler notes I
> published a workshop from Canterbury a while ago (a mid fourth century
> deposit), but I have a lot more data.
>
> Most British evidence of pin manufacture comes from town sites, but there
> is some from rural sites - e.g. From the villa at Piddington) but most of
> this are isolated examples rather than complete workshop sequences.
>
> If you'd like some more information and help let me know and I will help
> as much as I can. I've records of around 10,000 British bone hair pins and
> am about to embark on a project looking in more detail at some assemblages,
> so I would be very interested in hearing more about your finds in any case.
>
> I see others have sent you some useful publications which are all good. We
> don't (yet) have a comparable catalogue from a uk site, but my PhD (alas
> unpublished) has a very large body of material.
>
> Let me know if you'd like more detailed help - and I would be very
> interested from a personal point of view in any case
>
> Stephen Greep
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> > On 9 May 2014, at 13:44, Lena Strid <lena.strid at oxfordarch.co.uk> wrote:
> >
> > Dear all,
> >
> > I have a very large Roman deposit of chopped up long bones from making
> bone pins. The bones are mostly cattle and horse metapodials, radius and
> tibia. The deposit is sampled entirely, sieved down to 4mm, and contains
> everything from large proximal and distal ends down to broken-off hexagonal
> offcuts. It is a rural site, but very close to a Roman town in southern
> England.
> >
> > Would any of you have any tips on the most useful way to record the
> deposit and/or a good reference material. I already know of Vine St
> (Leicester) and Sagalassos (Turkey). There is unlikely to be time for me to
> do a in-depth analysis of the bone working procedure, but the assemblage
> would be retained for future research.
> >
> > With thanks,
> > Lena
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