Abstract

This paper presents a new macroscopic method for identifying chop marks on archaeological faunal assemblages and highlights the major differences in the morphology of chop marks created by stone and metal axes. The method provides macroscopic criteria that aid in the identification of both complete and incomplete chop mark types as well as the raw material of the axe. Experiments with modern stone (chipped and ground) and metal (copper and bronze) axes found that the degree of fragmentation within a chop mark is related to both the width and sharpness of the axe and can be classed on a scale from 1–5 using a variety of criteria. The experiments demonstrate that sharp chipped stone axes are fragile (often break upon impact) and do not create clean and well-defined chop marks. Ground stone axes are more durable but tend to create very fragmented chop marks without a clean cut (sheared) surface. Unalloyed copper metal axes can create sheared chopped surfaces; however, the relatively soft metal creates more crushing at the point of entry than bronze axes. In contrast, bronze axes are durable and create chop marks with exceptionally low rates of fragmentation resulting in a clean-cut sheared surface that extends into the bone for more than 3 mm. The method is applied to the faunal assemblage from the Early Bronze Age site of Göltepe, Turkey to determine whether the chop marks on bones were made by stone or metal axes at this early metal processing settlement. The results suggest that many of the chop marks were made by metal implements (e.g., axes). Hence, this method provides another means to monitor the adoption rates of new raw materials at a time when both metal and stone axes coexisted.

Highlights

  • We present our recent experimental research to aid in the definition of macroscopic diagnostic differences between several types of chopping tool shapes and raw material choices

  • Our study demonstrates that the macroscopic morphology of chop marks generally reflects the raw material of the chopping tool, as well as the nature of tool production

  • Without the crushing at the edges, this type of chop mark is indeterminable minable from natural breakage as the bone often fractures into multiple pieces causing from natural breakage as the bone often fractures into multiple pieces causing uncontrolled uncontrolled breakage

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Summary

Introduction

Animal carcass butchery practices involve a variety of tools, and the resulting actions include bashes, chops, saw marks, and slices. The resulting marks on bone allow zooarchaeologists to map out the process by which the carcass is prepared from slaughter, to secondary stages (skinning, dismemberment, and disarticulation), and final stages (marrow extraction, and filleting) [1–4]. Each of these actions leaves diagnostic marks on the bones. The location and types of marks can inform on butchering tool preference and raw material choices [5–7], as well as cultural preferences related to food preparation [8–11]

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