|
Date: |
|
Description: | An incomplete 'jet' bead of possible bronze age date. A broken fusiform bead, approximately half the original surviving. The bead is now 12.2mm in length and with a variable diameter at the widest part, from 12.1 - 12.4 mm. It is highly polished. The surviving end has a flat sub-circular face 6.5 mm in diameter, with a central perforation. This perforation tapers from 3.1 mm at the surviving end face, to 2.2mm at the break. It is not clear whether the perforation is expanding from a central minimum at or near the break, therefore it cannot be said with any confidence that the perforation was double-tapered, though this would certainly have been normal practise.Fusiform jet and lignite beads are standard parts of both the spectacular spacer-plate necklaces which copy gold lunulae, and the disc & fusiform bead necklaces found in early Bronze Age female burials, especially in the North of Britain and Wales. A complete necklace from Poltalloch, Argylle has beads of very similar form. The East Kinwhirrie, Angus and the Pen y Bonc, Anglesey necklace also. A single fusiform jet bead (LANCUM-46FBD2) from Penrith, Cumbria was recorded here. For a discussion of the jet and jet-like materials used in the Early Bronze Age of Scotland, see - Alison Sheridan & Mary Davis, 'Investigating jet and jet-like artefacts from prehistoric Scotland: the National Museums of Scotland Project' (2002) | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
BEAD
An incomplete 'jet' bead of…
-
BEAD
Large spacer bead made from…
-
-
BEAD
Jet bead, possibly dating to…
-
ASSEMBLAGE
Description: Beaker/Early Bronze Age gold…
-
Bead
A jet bead of either…
-
BEAD
A jet bead of either…
-
Bead
Jet bead, possibly dating to…
-
BEAD
Jet bead, possibly dating to…
-
LUNULA
The lunula terminal is complete…
|