Journal of Lithic Studies (Mar 2014)

Estimating the scale of stone axe production: A case study from Onega Lake, Russian Karelia

  • Alexey Tarasov,
  • Sergey Stafeev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2218/jls.v1i1.757
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 239 – 261

Abstract

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The industry of metatuff axes and adzes on the western coast of Onega Lake (Eneolithic period, ca. 3500 – 1500 cal. BC) allows assuming some sort of craft specialization. Excavations of a workshop site Fofanovo XIII, conducted in 2010-2011, provided an extremely large assemblage of artefacts (over 350000 finds from just 30 m2, mostly production debitage). An attempt to estimate the output of production within the excavated area is based on experimental data from a series of replication experiments. Mass-analysis with the aid of image recognition software was used to obtain raw data from flakes from excavations and experiments. Statistical evaluation assures that the experimental results can be used as a basement for calculations. According to the proposed estimation, some 500 – 1000 tools could have been produced here, and this can be qualified as an evidence of “mass-production”.

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