Production and Exchange of Stone Tools
Originally published in 1986, the aim of this important study was to develop methods for reconstructing the processes of prehistoric exchange. Previous archaeological work had concentrated on mapping obsidian finds relative to source areas using trace-element analysis and on investigating the effect of trade on particular cultural groups. Dr Torrence, in contrast, drew extensively on ethnographic analogy to develop an approach that uses differences in the level of efficiency for the acquisition of raw materials and the production of goods to infer the type of exchange. Regional patterns of tool manufacture, specialist craft production at central places and quarrying are analysed in detail in the context of the prehistoric Aegean and previous ideas about the importance of trade in the growth of civilisations are re-assessed. The methodology developed will be applicable to a wide range of artefact types and the book will therefore be of value to archaeologists working in many different places and periods.
Product details
March 2009Paperback
9780521105071
272 pages
244 × 170 × 14 mm
0.44kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Complementary views of exchange: acquisition, production and consumption
- 2. Past and present perspectives
- 3. Designing an instrument for measuring exchange
- 4. A test case: Aegean obsidian exchange
- 5. Regional analyses based on production
- 6. Workshops, craft specialists and commercial production
- 7. Acquisition and production at raw material sources
- 8. Cautionary tales.