Abstract

The high-altitude site of Karmir Sar is located around 2850 m a.s.l. on the southern slopes of Mt. Aragats (Armenia). Numerous stone structures (including vishaps, cromlechs, stone enclosures) are found all over the 40 ha-sized meadow, out of which three vishaps, four cromlechs and one circular stone structure have been investigated since 2012. According to 14C-dates, pottery and diagnostic lithic artefacts, human presence at Karmir Sar started as early as the Chalcolithic Period and continued (with gaps) until modern times; whereby the Middle Bronze Age (MBA) and the Medieval era represent the most intensive periods of occupation.
 This contribution presents primary data on the typology and technology of 1129 chipped lithic artefacts that have been excavated in four trenches at Karmir Sar (operations KS A, KS C, KS D, and KS E). This study of the lithic industries of Karmir Sar will be embedded within the framework of lithic economy, which considers lithic artefacts as part of a comprehensive interaction between lithic production and consumption. The lithic economy includes strategies of raw material procurement, blanks production and its transformation into tools, tool use, as well as the circulation of raw materials or products. Due to multiple use episodes and a general lack of clear stratigraphical horizons, the assemblages of Karmir Sar are not suitable to define the lithic industry for specific periods (such as the Chalcolithic or MBA periods). However, the data allows for general conclusions on lithic production and consumption at Karmir Sar, which appears to be quite similar during both periods.
 The Chalcolithic and MBA lithic economies at Karmir Sar are characterized by an ad hoc tool production environment, which well matches the needs of semi-mobile herder societies. The majority of raw materials appear to be procured from secondary source areas (such as riverbeds) which is indicated by a high ratio of battered and rolled surfaces. Tools are predominantly produced on-site, and according to daily demands by simple flake core technology. This allowed for a flexible, spontaneous blank and tool production without being dependent on specialized blade producers.

Highlights

  • The site of Karmir SarThe site of Karmir Sar is located at a mean altitude of 2850 m a.s.l on the southern slopes of Mt

  • The continuity of lithic technologies in the post-Stone-Age-periods is well attested in adjacent regions, where lithic tool production and use persisted until the Late Bronze Age period and in some areas even beyond

  • This contribution aims at shedding some light on the South-Caucasian Chalcolithic and Middle Bronze Age (MBA) obsidian industries based on the lithic artefacts found by the Armenian-German-Italian mission at Karmir Sar

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Summary

Introduction

The site of Karmir Sar is located at a mean altitude of 2850 m a.s.l on the southern slopes of Mt. The continuity of lithic technologies in the post-Stone-Age-periods is well attested in adjacent regions (such as Anatolia, Mesopotamia, or the Levant, e.g., Greenfields 2013; Hartenberger et al 2014; Kobayashi 2007; Nishiaki 2014; Rosen 1997; Rosen & Vardi 2014; Sagona et al 1998; Steadman et al 2013), where lithic tool production and use persisted until the Late Bronze Age period and in some areas even beyond This contribution aims at shedding some light on the South-Caucasian Chalcolithic and MBA obsidian industries based on the lithic artefacts found by the Armenian-German-Italian mission at Karmir Sar. More than 1100 chipped lithic artefacts that were found in four excavation areas (KS A, KS C, KS D, and KS E) will be presented in a typo-technological study. The lithic economy includes (among others): the modes and strategies of raw material procurement, the production of blanks and their transformation into tools, tool use, as well as the circulation of raw materials or products (cf. Purschwitz 2017, in press)

Methods and samples
Raw materials and raw material procurement
Primary production
Blank consumption and tool production
Blank selection
Tool production
Discussion: dating evidence and socioeconomic context
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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