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Am 10.11.2010 14:28, schrieb Leigh Allen:
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<pre wrap="">Dear Colleagues,
I attach a photograph of a rather beautiful bone object recovered from one of our excavations at Didcot, Oxfordshire, if anyone can tell me what it may have been used for I would be most grateful, it came from a Late Roman context. The closest parallel I have found so far are Prehistoric tools for decorating pots although these tend to have teeth at the splayed end and a perforation through the centre.
Many thanks
Leigh Allen
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Dear Leigh,<br>
these kind of artefacts are well known in the Swiss lake shore
settlements. They are made of bones but mostly of red deer antler.
The pointed end is hafted. In eastern Swiss sites there are such
tools that also have two drilled holes for the fixation of the
hafting (wooden handle). They normaly are regarded as scrapers
perhaps to work hide. I attache an example made of bone from a site
called Twann at the lake of Bienne which is dated to around 3600 BC.
The length of the tool is 6 cm.<br>
Best wishes!<br>
Joerg<br>
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<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
Prof. Dr. Jörg Schibler
Institute for Prehistory and Archaeological Science (IPAS)
Institut de Préhistoire et Science en Archéologie (IPSA)
Institut für Prähistorische und Naturwissenschaftliche Archäologie (IPNA)
Basel University
Spalenring 145
CH-4055 Basel, Switzerland
Tel +41 61 201 02 12
Fax +41 61 201 02 55
email: <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:joerg.schibler@unibas.ch">joerg.schibler@unibas.ch</a>
homepage: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://ipna.unibas.ch/">http://ipna.unibas.ch/</a>
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