|
Date: |
|
Description: | Polished axe fragment of probable later Neolithic date (2500-2100 BC). The length is 95mm, width 55mm, thickness 8mm and the weight is 8.13g. The axe is knapped from a grey volcanic tuff. This axe would have been, like many of the larger and finished (polished) Langdale axes, sub-rectangular plan with distinctive humped faces. The axe fragment has been damaged in several areas and is now sub-oval in plan. It is impossible to source axes such as these without a detailed petrological analysis of the rock. This would allow the original source of the rock to be established. However, the weathered colour of the tuff is typically similar to a number of axes in the collection of KendalMuseum and Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery, Carlisle, which have been petrographically tested as coming from the Langdale source (Group VI). Considering that this is a find from Northern England, Langdale seems to be the most likely source.This rock type is formed from compressed volcanic ash and has a fine grained composition with infrequent crystalline inclusions. Tuff is found in Britain and Ireland in a band that runs down the Irish Sea from the Lake District (the Langdale's source Group VI), County Antrim (Ireland), through North Wales (Graig Lwyd Group VII), and into Cornwall and Devon (Groups XVI and IV respectively). Volcanic tuff is similar to flint in that it can be finely worked, ground and polished to form a variety of tools; however axes are the most common find type and were used across Northern Europe during the Neolithic period.
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
AXE
Polished axe tuff fragment of…
-
AXE
Polished axe tuff fragment of…
-
-
-
AXE
Polished axe tuff fragment of…
-
AXE
Axe rough out of probable…
-
-
Axe
Comparatively small, somewhat worn and…
-
AXE
Comparatively small, somewhat worn and…
-
AXE
Two large joining fragments of…
|