Publication details

The origin and distribution of obsidian in prehistoric Bohemia

Authors

BURGERT Pavel PŘICHYSTAL Antonín PROKEŠ Lubomír PETŘÍK Jan HUŠKOVÁ Simona

Year of publication 2017
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source BULGARSKO E-SPISANIE ZA ARKHEOLOGIYA-BULGARIAN E-JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/3e1a/e4d93b23dc7c950da1a6668103144b033d1c.pdf?_ga=2.185349871.751570105.1586865481-688994828.1568106353
Keywords Obsidian; outcrops; raw material distribution; Palaeolithic; Neolithic; geochemistry
Description This paper summarizes current knowledge of the distribution of obsidian in prehistoric Bohemia (Czech Republic). In terms of this raw material's distribution, Bohemia is a peripheral area, and it is also the westernmost part of its regular archaeological occurrence. Because of its rarity within the specified area, it is possible to identify this material quite easily even in earlier archaeological literature, and together with new discoveries, to create a coherent picture of its distribution. So far, only two locations in Bohemia have been described where the processing of raw obsidian material is documented. Both these sites are located in the eastern part of the study area; in terms of location these are the closest sites to the anticipated sources. The sites are dated to a later stage of the Stroked Pottery culture. Because no such processing sites are known from other periods, we believe it was mainly the distribution of entire blanks and pre-prepared cores that took place at that time. Furthermore, our study discusses the original sources of obsidian in terms of the region that is being monitored. In accordance with the aims of our investigation, the selected obsidian artefacts were subjected to geochemical analysis to identify their origins. The peak of the distribution is the period of the Stroked Pottery culture (4900-4500/4400 cal BC). The basic outcome of the geochemical analysis is the identification of at least two sources of raw material in the Carpathian source area.

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