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PERFECT
TEXTBOOK NEANDERTHAL
MOUSTERIAN FLINT NOTCH
Rock Shelter - Dordogne (Village of Plazac), France
MIDDLE
PALEOLITHIC PERIOD (MOUSTERIAN): 80,000 - 40,000 years ago This
authentic stone tool was fashioned by Neanderthals over 40,000 years ago
out of flint and discovered in the world famous region of Dordogne,
France, considered to be the "Capitol of Prehistory". The
site this specimen was excavated from is now closed and protected by the government.
This rare artifact was legally
collected with the landowner's permission decades
ago before the area was sealed. Dordogne is one of the world's most
famous Neanderthal regions and the fact that this archeological site is off-limits to any collecting, makes this wonderful stone
tool artifact exceedingly rare and desirable!
This is a perfect and classic textbook example of a Mousterian NOTCH. Notch and
denticulate tools are amongst the most commonly occurring tools in the
Middle Paleolithic Period along with scrapers. As members of the
Mousterian Denticulate tool group, notches and denticulates include
broad variations of the design. More specifically, a NOTCH can be made
with a single blow to a flake near an edge or by a series of blows to
hollow out a concavity. This concave cutting edge is then used to
create smooth round surfaces on a rod of bone, wood or ivory, for
example. This tool was made by the former method with a strong blow to
the center of the scraper edge. The inner region of the concavity shows
signs of use wear to evidence that this is simply not a damaged
scraper. This tool was discovered in a rock shelter with other tools
and some broken fossil animal bones, mostly likely fractured for the
prized marrow inside, a valuable Neanderthal food source. Intact
original Neanderthal habitation layer sediment is present on the
surface, having been dug from a subterranean level dating to the Middle
Paleolithic Era. A superb
and perfect example from this famous site! Flint shows white
hydration patina from millennia of exposure to a wet environment.
NO RESTORATION, REPAIR OR
MODERN DAMAGE.
Our fortunate
purchase of a very old private collection from the original excavator
allows us to offer this artifact
at a price WELL BELOW
ITS BOOK VALUE. The
MOUSTERIAN tool tradition gets its name from artifacts discovered at a
primitive rock shelter named Le Moustier located in southwestern
France. Compared to the bulkier tools of the Acheulian produced by
the Levallois technique, Mousterian tools are comprised of smaller
flakes from an exhaustively worked core which are then retouched on the
edges to make a large variety of tools. These tools are not only
smaller than Acheulian specimens, but they are more specialized for
their various tasks. Mousterian tools can be broadly put into four
classes: 1) SAWS (Denticulate Tools) and KNIVES, 2) SCRAPERS
3) BORERS 4) HANDAXES, CHOPPERS and CLEAVERS.
Mousterian
tool-makers were the primitive humans knows as the NEANDERTHALS.
Neanderthals had massive skeletons and teeth, flat foreheads and heavy
brow ridges. Their skulls were larger than a modern man and
contained an average brain capacity of 1500 cc, averaging slightly
larger than humans of today.
FINEST POSSIBLE NEANDERTHAL
NOTCH TOOL FROM THE "CAPITOL OF PREHISTORY" - TRUE INVESTMENT!
SITE NOW PROTECTED AND NO
COLLECTING HAS BEEN ALLOWED SINCE 1986!
2" in length
SOLD
M185
INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX
Actual Item - One Only
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