|
Date: |
|
Description: | Complete, cast copper alloy Late Bronze Age socketed axe of South Eastern class A. The axe is wedge-shaped in profile and subrectangular in plan. The mouth of the axe is subsquare. The axe has a double mouth moulding; the upper moulding is now badly worn and chipped. Beneath the upper moulding is a wide, shallow groove or indent. The body of the axe is rectangular with gently flaring sides that expand into the lower blade and cutting edge. The cutting edge is missing, and the exposed edge worn and pitted. The blade tips are also worn down. Casting seams are clearly visible on both sides of the axe, and partially on the loop where the original surface survives. The loop is semi-circular with an oval perforation. It extends from the lower moulding for 23.86mm and is 11.5mm wide. Most of the original surface of the axe survives with an even mid-green patina. Exposed abraded or pitted surfaces are light green. There is some bright green corrosion product at the mouth edge. The axe is undecorated. Chipped edges are worn, suggesting damage occurred in antiquity. The axe is 98.96mm long. The mouth has an external width of 40.44mm and is 42.86mm high. The corresponding internal dimensions are 27.94mm by 30.26mm. The axe is 30.5mm wide at the mid-point of the body, and 43.92mm wide from tip to tip across the remains of the cutting edge. The axe weighs 255g. The axe is a south-eastern type, Variant Beddlestead Green (Schmidt & Burgess 1981, The Axes of Scotland and Northern England page 213, plate 85 number 1271). South-eastern axes are diagnostic of the Ewart Park phase of the late Bronze Age c.1000-800 BC (Needham et al. 1998, Archaeological Journal, 154, pages 93-8).
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
-
-
HOARD
1. Complete, cast copper alloy…
-
HOARD
1. Complete, cast copper alloy…
-
-
-
-
-
-
HOARD
A Bronze Age hoard.
1.…
|