Petroarcheometric Analysis on Obsidian Artefacts Found Within Some Neolithic – Eneolithic Period Caves of Southern Italy

Author:

Acquafredda Pasquale1,Larocca Felice2,Minelli Antonella3,Pallara Mauro4,Micheletti Francesca4

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e Geoambientali, via Orabona 4, Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro, Bari, Italy; Centro Interdipartimentale, Laboratorio di Ricerca per la Diagnostica dei Beni Culturali, via Orabona 4, Bari70125, Italy

2. Centro Regionale di Speleologia “Enzo dei Medici” – Commissione di ricerca per l’Archeologia delle Grotte, via Lucania 3, 87070 Roseto Capo Spulico (CS), Italy; Centro di ricerca speleo-archeologica – Laboratorio di Paletnologia, via Pisani 26, 87010 Sant’Agata di Esaro (CS), Italy

3. Dipartimento di Scienze Umanistiche, Sociali e della Formazione, via De Sanctis, Università del Molise, Campobasso, Italy

4. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra e Geoambientali, via Orabona 4, Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro, Bari, Italy

Abstract

AbstractIn the last twenty years, obsidian artefacts have been found in important and often extensive karst cavities in Southern Italy: three located in Calabria (Grotta della Monaca, and Grotta del Tesauro, in Sant’Agata di Esaro, Cosenza; Grotta Pietra Sant’Angelo in San Lorenzo Bellizzi, Cosenza), one in Puglia (Grotta di Santa Barbara in Polignano a Mare, Bari) and another in Campania (Grotta di Polla, Salerno). All these sites, that have returned a total of 151 obsidian tools, were connected to human frequentation of the underground environments that occurred during the Holocene, which can be precisely located in the vast period between the Neolithic and the Eneolithic (6th–4th millennium BC). They are mainly blades and bladelets, but also burins together with scrapers and cores, generally of small dimensions. SEM-EDS and WD-XRF absolutely non-destructive analyses carried out on these items have shown that all samples have a source area in the obsidian outcrops of the island of Lipari (Messina, Italy). These data confirm that the Aeolian island of Lipari furnished the privileged obsidian extraction outcrops for most of the Neolithic and Eneolithic archaeological sites of Southern Italy.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Education,Archaeology,Conservation

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