Loading, please wait...
Details
LOT 1116
Stone Age Aterian Tanged Arrowheads
CIRCA 85,000-40,000 B.P.
1 - 2 1/8 in. (250 grams total, 27-55 mm).
A group of 20 tanged stone transverse style arrowheads. [20, No Reserve]
Provenance
From Grotte des Pigeons in Taforalt, Morocco, North Africa.
Ex Arthur Halcrow Versage collection, Reigate, Surrey, UK.
Footnotes
The tang would have been inserted into a split handle or shaft material, like wood or bone, and then bound in position with cord, or with a binding agent which would have harden to form a permanent bond. The Aterian is the name given to a distinctive stone tool industry made by anatomically modern humans between about 80,000 and 40,000 years ago. The tools are found on sites in northern Africa between the Atlantic coast to the Kharga Oasis and the western edge of the Nile River Basin. The manufacturing process for these tools is derived from the earlier "Mousterian" methods for working stone, using prepared and shaped cores from which were struck off large flakes which were then often unifacially trimmed into the desired tool shapes. They continued with the same basic stone working processes, but with a major conceptual difference. The "Aterian" style tools are the first to have clearly been designed and manufactured to be mounted on handles, with the projectile points and the scrapers having distinctive prepared "tangs" at the base of the tool or projectile point.
CONDITIONVETTING:
TimeLine Auctions follows a vetting process to ensure the authenticity and legality of all items, reinforcing our commitment to integrity and responsible trading. Each antiquity, antique, and coin lot undergoes thorough examination by a vetting committee of at least ten external specialists, professional trade association members, scientists, and archaeologists: Our Vetting Process
AUCTIONS:
TimeLine is a leading auction house specialising in antiquities, ancient art, collectables, natural history, coins, medals, and books. Our auctions offer museums, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts the opportunity to acquire unique and historically significant pieces.
RELATED LOTS
-
Stone Age Boat-Shaped Axehead
Neolithic Period, circa 3rd millennium B.C.Sold for (Inc. bp): £156
A diorite axe-hammer, with rounded butt chamfered at the edge and with convex sides, sub-rectangular in section, dark green fine-grained stone. 635 grams, 10 cm
Acquired 1971-1972. From the collection of the vendor's father. Property of a London, UK, collector.
During Neolithic period, while objects for everyday use, such as knife blades, arrows and lance tips were often only knapped - albeit with very fine retouching - and people soon learnt how to polish selected tools and equipment with sand for a smooth surface. Rotating tubular bone and sand made it possible to fit axes and hammers with a pierced 'eye' for the handle. This eye socket is the preliminary stage of the Bronze Age socket. -
Large Danish Stone Age Neolithic Thin Butted Axe
Dolman Period, 3700-3300 B.C.Sold for (Inc. bp): £416
A very finely polished axe with square edges and convex cutting edge, in yellow-brown flint with evidence of use as a 'strike-a-light' to the butt; with old collector label '179' to face. 758 grams, 20.5 cm
Fine condition.
Acquired 1990s. French private collection before 2020. Property of a Sussex, UK, teacher. -
Stone Age Vinca Idol
Neolithic Period, 6th-4th millennium B.C.Sold for (Inc. bp): £508
A ceramic figurine fragment of a standing female with stub arms extended laterally, incised chevron detailing to lower body. 74 grams, 88 mm
Fine condition.
Ex central European collection. Munich, Germany 1999. G.M.R.H.collection, West London, UK.