Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)

This paper aims to present a techno-functional study of lignite ornamental objects found during the Fedele excavations (1977-1980) in the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Salto-Turin, Italy). The site demonstrates a chrono-cultural sequence which extends from the late Palaeolithic to the Modern era. Parti...

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Main Authors: S. Viola, G. Gaj, D. Del Caro, M. Besse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2020-08-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10523
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spelling doaj-95366a70886a464f87a2544babaeccbd2021-06-15T15:28:54ZengEXARCEXARC Journal2212-89562020-08-012020/3ark:/88735/10523Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)S. ViolaG. GajD. Del CaroM. BesseThis paper aims to present a techno-functional study of lignite ornamental objects found during the Fedele excavations (1977-1980) in the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Salto-Turin, Italy). The site demonstrates a chrono-cultural sequence which extends from the late Palaeolithic to the Modern era. Particularly during the first phases of the Metal Ages (Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age- c. 3400-1600 BC) the cave was a burial site, similar to others in the Alpine area. The technological study of manufacturing methods, based on a wide experimental base, and conducted with the aid of digital microscopy is focused on drilling and shaping techniques. This method is a very valid approach to identify cultural peculiarities comparable with other contemporary contexts. The bead assemblage kept in the Museo Archeologico del Canavese (Cuorgnè, Turin) was analysed to see if it shows any technological and/or use wear indicators. Among the most remarkable aspects are the presence of beads of small dimension. Between the Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age, the beads with micro-perforations are quite numerous (normally on microlithic supports less than 3 mm in diameter), but there are no clear hypotheses on the techniques and instruments used during the drilling and manufacture activity.https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10523ancient technologychalcolithicitalyjewellerybronze age
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Viola
G. Gaj
D. Del Caro
M. Besse
spellingShingle S. Viola
G. Gaj
D. Del Caro
M. Besse
Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
EXARC Journal
ancient technology
chalcolithic
italy
jewellery
bronze age
author_facet S. Viola
G. Gaj
D. Del Caro
M. Besse
author_sort S. Viola
title Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
title_short Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
title_full Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
title_fullStr Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
title_full_unstemmed Techno-functional Study of the Personal Ornaments in Lignite of the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Torino-Italy)
title_sort techno-functional study of the personal ornaments in lignite of the boira fusca cave (cuorgnè, torino-italy)
publisher EXARC
series EXARC Journal
issn 2212-8956
publishDate 2020-08-01
description This paper aims to present a techno-functional study of lignite ornamental objects found during the Fedele excavations (1977-1980) in the Boira Fusca Cave (Cuorgnè, Salto-Turin, Italy). The site demonstrates a chrono-cultural sequence which extends from the late Palaeolithic to the Modern era. Particularly during the first phases of the Metal Ages (Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age- c. 3400-1600 BC) the cave was a burial site, similar to others in the Alpine area. The technological study of manufacturing methods, based on a wide experimental base, and conducted with the aid of digital microscopy is focused on drilling and shaping techniques. This method is a very valid approach to identify cultural peculiarities comparable with other contemporary contexts. The bead assemblage kept in the Museo Archeologico del Canavese (Cuorgnè, Turin) was analysed to see if it shows any technological and/or use wear indicators. Among the most remarkable aspects are the presence of beads of small dimension. Between the Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age, the beads with micro-perforations are quite numerous (normally on microlithic supports less than 3 mm in diameter), but there are no clear hypotheses on the techniques and instruments used during the drilling and manufacture activity.
topic ancient technology
chalcolithic
italy
jewellery
bronze age
url https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10523
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