Seller:palatina✉️(6,142)0%,
Location:Heidelberg, DE,
Ships to: WORLDWIDE,
Item:3623007976858500Y.O: WONDERFUL AX ADZE 140mms DANISH STONE AGE MESOLITHIC FLINT MAGLEMOSE C.
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EUROPEAN PREHISTORIC ARTIFACTS BY PALATINA
AUTHENTICITY GUARANTEED!
This wonderful Danish Mesolithic flint artifact is a
"Core Axe ( Ax ) with rhombical cross section".
This type occurs wherever core axes
are found, but plays the greatest role in the Younger Maglemose
Culture (8900-6400 bc), Kongemose Culture (6400-5400 bc.) and the
older Ertebølle - Ellerbek Culture ( Kitchen Midden Culture ) 5400-4000 bc.
During the Mesolithic period (c.9300-4000 BC)
after the end of the ice age, hunters spread across the extensive area which connected
Denmark to England during the Continental period. The forest was relatively
light in the beginning with bison, wild horses, elk and aurochs. In time, the
forest became more dense and red deer and roe-deer became the commonest game.
Settlements were often situated near the edges of lakes which have since become bogs.
In the east of Denmark, the peat in these bogs has preserved a rich variety of weapons
and tools, bones from slaughtered animals and the remains of dwellings, including
hut floors made of wood and bark. During the Atlantic period, 6400-4000 BC, the sea
level rose so much that the northern parts of Denmark were divided into islands, and
deep fiords cut into the landscape. A dense forest dominated by limetrees spread across
the land. The population was found mostly near the coasts and lived on fish and shellfish,
supplemented by hunting and sealing. Food scraps were piled up in kitchen middens
which contained huge numbers of oyster shells. Grave finds bear witness to care and
respect for the dead.
During the early Maglemose period, core axes came into ever
more common use and gradually replaced the earlier flake axes.
Core axes were manufactured out of smaller pieces of flint by
knapping away surplus stone along the side edges. The new axes
used less raw material and were easier to resharpen than the
flake axes, which explains why they came to dominate over the
older type. Wear induced polishing along the cutting edge
indicates that these axes were probably used to trim and
finish wood. This is further supported by microscopic analysis
of the cutting edge of axes recovered from the "Ochre Graves"
at Bögebakken. Many archaeological finds have shown that core
axes were hafted at right angles to the handle in the same way
as an adze. Core axes are unknown from the Neolithic period.
The rhombical type of adze is unsymmetrical to the vertical and the horizontal plane.
The side-edges shaped from opposite sides, making the cross section
assume the shape of a rhomb or a parallelogram. The cutting
edge is parallel with the sides.
Provenance is an old collection.
More details will follow the artifact.
I guarantee absolutely for the authenticity of
this terrific piece from the Hunter Gatherer Stone Age.
Please view also my other auctions with
relics from the European Prehistory.
etope-lister
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Popularity - 8500Y.O: WONDERFUL AX ADZE 140mms DANISH STONE AGE MESOLITHIC FLINT MAGLEMOSE C
2 watchers, 0.3 new watchers per day, 7 days for sale on eBay. Good amount watching. 1 sold, 0 available. 1 bid.
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Price - 8500Y.O: WONDERFUL AX ADZE 140mms DANISH STONE AGE MESOLITHIC FLINT MAGLEMOSE C
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Seller - 8500Y.O: WONDERFUL AX ADZE 140mms DANISH STONE AGE MESOLITHIC FLINT MAGLEMOSE C
6,142+ items sold. 0% negative feedback. Good seller with good positive feedback and good amount of ratings.