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Flint quarrying in north-eastern Iberia: quarry sites and the initial transformation of raw material

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 September 2017

Xavier Terradas*
Affiliation:
Spanish National Research Council (CSIC—IMF), Archaeology of Social Dynamics, Carrer de les Egipcíaques 15, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
David Ortega
Affiliation:
Spanish National Research Council (CSIC—IMF), Archaeology of Social Dynamics, Carrer de les Egipcíaques 15, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
*
Author for correspondence (Email: terradas@imf.csic.es)
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Extract

Prehistoric communities carried out quarrying activities to obtain raw materials for tool production. These were produced either directly for immediate or later use by the same groups who quarried the stone, or indirectly by distributing the raw material or partially or completely manufactured products to third parties. All these procedures could be performed within a temporal and spatial sequence of variable extent, giving rise to archaeological evidence of very different types (Nelson 1991; Ingold 2012).

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Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2017 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Flint-quarrying waste at the Les Pedrenyeres site (Ulldemolins).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Hornfels hammer recovered from the surface of the Montvell quarries (Castelló de Farfanya).

Figure 2

Figure 3. Accumulation of flint debris at the Cantacorbs site (Montblanc).

Figure 3

Figure 4. One of the Montvell quarry fronts (Castelló de Farfanya) from which flint nodules have been extracted.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Location of the four case studies in north-eastern Iberia. The circle with a white line corresponds to the Montvell quarries.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Three stepped quarry fronts opened on a hill slope in Montvell (Castelló de Farfanya).