Aroche (Huelva, Andalucia): a new Neolithic axehead of Alpine jade in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula

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TitreAroche (Huelva, Andalucia): a new Neolithic axehead of Alpine jade in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursDominguez-Bella S, Cassen S, Petrequin P, Prichystal A, Martinez J, Ramos J, Medina N
JournalARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume8
Pagination205-222
Date PublishedMAR
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1866-9557
Mots-clésAlpine jade polished axehead, Andalucia SW Spain, Jadeitite-omphacitite, Mont Viso, Neolithic exchanges, Variscite
Résumé

The discovery of a Neolithic Alpine jade axehead in Aroche, in the southwest of Spain, revives the question of long-distance exchange between the Iberian Peninsula and the rest of Europe. This polished blade belongs to a typological model quite characteristic of Alpine production during the second half of the 5th millennium B.C. Different mineralogical approaches (macroscopic features examination, specific gravity, direct XRD, non-destructive mu XRF spectroscopy, optical stereomicroscopy, magnetic susceptibility determination and microprobe analysis) have identified the rock as an omphacitic jadeitite (mixed jade) with some tiny garnets and a weak retromorphosis. This analysis and the comparison of the rock structure with the referential JADE of Alpine natural jade samples, as well as the extraction modalities and shaping of the axe, provide strong arguments to assign the Aroche axe to a production of Mont Viso: the origin of thousands of axes that circulated in Europe between Ireland and Sicily. The Aroche axe, discovered not far from the variscite mines of Encinasola, could be considered as part of a possible exchange system between the Iberian Peninsula and the Gulf of Morbihan, in Brittany.

DOI10.1007/s12520-015-0232-9