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RARE FINAL ACHEULIAN
MICOQUIAN HANDAXE WITH CHOICE WORKMANSHIP
Exposed Site - Algerian Sahara Desert, North Africa
MIDDLE PALEOLITHIC PERIOD (FINAL ACHEULIAN):
115,000 - 100,000 years ago This wonderful bifacial quartzite handaxe was made and used by
EARLY MAN of the
primitive species Homo erectus. It was
surface-collected from an exposed Acheulian site in the Algerian Sahara
Desert of North Africa. This Lower Paleolithic tool represents the
first intelligent design type known to science that was made by
primitive humans. Prior to these Saharan Acheulian handaxes, only
crude pebble and flake tools existed in the human fossil record.
This is the first time we have offered such a handaxe. It is a
MICOQUIAN handaxe from the final period of the Acheulian. Its
reduced size and refined long body style indicate what's to come -
Neanderthals would take this technology and develop what was to be the
MOUSTERIAN tool type. Micoquian handaxes are noted for their
lanceolate body design with rounded proximal ends and long, slightly
concave edges leading to a sharply pointed tip. These axes
resemble a combination of Acheulian and Mousterian features and are the
product of the end of the ACHEULIAN period. Micoquian axes were
first discovered on a site called La Micoque, Dordogne in France. This is an
excellent
reference specimen and especially interesting because of its small size.
Choice two-tone patina (different on each side) with natural desert wind erosion - traits of authentic Acheulian
artifacts indicative of long-term exposure on one side as it
lay undisturbed and exposed for millennia. In "as found" ORIGINAL condition with NO
REPAIR AND NO RESTORATION. OUR
HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION OF THIS VERY IMPORTANT ARTIFACT!!!
For the advanced and
well-outfitted lineage of human tool technology in the Stone Age, this
is a MILESTONE ARTIFACT as it is a specimen of the transition where Homo
erectus was soon to disappear and be replaced by Neanderthals who were
emerging and improving upon handaxes like this to give us the MOUSTERIAN
PERIOD. This is very obvious when you put this specific axe up
against all other specimens we offer in this
ACHEULIAN PERIOD section. It is
far more refined and smaller than all the rest! In
Africa, the Acheulian Tradition is well-defined and most diverse when
compared to other regions where it eventually spread to. HANDAXES
are the most typical bifacial tool associated with this period.
Different from the bifacial tools from the earlier Oldowan Period,
Acheulian tools are fashioned from large flakes as opposed to using a
whole cobblestone as the core. Along with handaxes, other bifacial
tools that are Acheulian are CLEAVERS
(large handaxes with a flat chopping edge) and PICKS
(robust elongated, trihedral tools). Other stone implements found
at Acheulian sites are small tools like NOTCHES,
SCRAPERS
and SPHEROIDS
(round flaked stone balls). Most tools of this period were
fashioned from basalt or quartzite. The
actual function of handaxes is debated. Some suggest they were not
used as a chopping tool but for butchering large game. Scientists have
shown that these tools exhibit wear common to butchery uses and these
tools have been found in association with prehistoric elephant bones on
intact "kill sites" of this period. Other
scientists have theorized they were thrown into a herd as a deadly
spinning projectile. Probably the most interesting theory and one
that explains why many unworn and pristine condition tools have been
found abandoned is that of the tool's use not as a tool at all but as an
aid to sexual attraction. Possibly, males used techniques of being
able to fashion symmetrical stone axes to attract females and
demonstrate they were the most capable individual for survival and
support of a family. If you were a primitive human able to make a
large symmetrical handaxe, this would show you were genetically superior
and an excellent candidate for mating. There is much evidence that
contradicts this theory but it sure is quite an interesting
hypothesis. Based on the varieties of utilitarian handaxe designs,
and not only obvious wear from use but actual well-thought flaking
designs to best fit ones hand, there's really little doubt that these
stone tools were relied upon on a daily basis for primitive man's
existence.
RARE
SPECIMEN FROM END OF ACHEULIAN - NEANDERTHALS EMERGING AND IMPROVING
THIS TECHNOLOGY!
4.5" in length x
2.5" wide
SOLD
ACH-063 Actual
Item - One Only
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