Abstract

The systematic archaeological study of the Timna Valley began over 50 years ago. Since then it has become a key site for understanding ancient copper production technologies in the Near East and beyond. However, the fantastic quantity of ground stone tools which are present at the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age copper smelting sites were never systematically studied. Questions regarding their origin, distribution, typologies, and especially their role within the chaîne opératoire of copper production, were seldom addressed. Although surprising, this has been the case for almost all of the excavated metal production sites around the world.In the framework of the renewed excavations at several of the copper smelting sites at Timna, a pioneering study was conducted in which more than 1000 ground stone tools were identified and registered. These tools include, among others, grinding stones, pounders, anvils and mortars; most were manufactured of compacted sandstone and granite, exposed in several locations in the valley. In this paper we present a typology and quantitative analysis of the ground stone tools which were used by the metal workers, and offer an interpretation of how the various types of tools were employed as part of the copper production process. This provides new insights regarding the smelting process and the conditions needed for its successful outcome.

Highlights

  • Timna, located in the southern Arabah, on the western margin of the Dead Sea Rift Valley, holds the second largest copper ore deposits in the southern Levant

  • This study focuses on the large assemblage of ground stone tools found at Site 34 (“Slaves’ Hill”), a large-scale industrial copper smelting site securely dated to the early Iron Age

  • The goal of our research is to present for the first time the attributes, typology, and quantitative analysis of the ground stone tools which were used by the metal workers community, and offer an interpretation of how the various types of tools were employed during the copper smelting process

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Summary

Introduction

Timna, located in the southern Arabah, on the western margin of the Dead Sea Rift Valley, holds the second largest copper ore deposits in the southern Levant (see Figure 1). The extensive archaeological study of the Timna Valley, which began over 50 years ago by Beno Rothenberg, has identified many copper smelting sites located mostly in the centre of the valley (see Figure 2), and has highlighted Timna as a key site for understanding ancient copper production technologies in the Near East and beyond (e.g., Rothenberg 1990; Craddock 1995; Pigott 1996). Journal of Lithic Studies (2016) vol 3, nr.

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