Provenance, technology and possible function of Gáta–Wieselburg vessels from the Trieste Karst (northeastern Italy)

Author:

Bernardini Federico12ORCID,De Min Angelo3,Velicogna Matteo3ORCID,Roffet‐Salque Mélanie4,Kiss Viktória5,Kasztovszky Zsolt6,Maróti Boglárka6,Szilágyi Veronika6,Melis Eszter5,Leghissa Elena7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Humanistic Studies University of Ca' Foscari Venezia Venice Italy

2. Multidisciplinary Laboratory, The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics Trieste Italy

3. Department of Mathematics and Geosciences University of Trieste Trieste Italy

4. Organic Geochemistry Unit School of Chemistry Bristol UK

5. HUN‐REN Research Centre for the Humanities, Institute of Archaeology Budapest Hungary

6. Nuclear Analysis and Radiography Department Centre for Energy Research, Eötvös Loránd Research Network Budapest Hungary

7. ZRC SAZU Institute of Archaeology Ljubljana Slovenia

Abstract

AbstractA few scattered vessels, typologically attributed to the Gáta–Wieselburg culture, are known from the Friuli Venezia Giulia region in northeastern Italy. This culture spread during the Early Bronze Age (Reinecke Br A1b and A2, 2100–1700/1600 bc) in present‐day eastern Austria, western Hungary and southwestern Slovakia. Rare ceramic artefacts, typically biconical double‐handled jugs with well‐burnished surfaces, have been discovered in caves of the Trieste Karst (Ciclami, Tartaruga, Teresiana and Ossa) and the Natisone Valley (Velika jama). This study aims to outline the technology, provenance and probable use of these rare jugs from the Trieste Karst. Two of these vessels from the Ciclami and Tartaruga caves have been investigated using various destructive and non‐destructive techniques, including optical microscopy, X‐ray computed microtomography and prompt‐gamma activation analysis, and chemically compared to contemporaneous vessels from the core region of the Gáta–Wieselburg culture in Hungary (10 vessels specifically analysed for this project) and earlier Neolithic and Copper Age vessels, likely produced locally in the Karst, Slovenia and Hungary. Based on the obtained results, the investigated Karst vessels were imported. Tentative identification of plant and animal lipids using organic residue analysis (i.e., gas chromatography–mass spectrometry) sheds light on their possible function.

Publisher

Wiley

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