Study: Grinding Tools Were Once Used In Plant, Pigment And Bone Processing At Jebel Oraf Site, Saudi Arabia

Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – Use-wear analysis of grinding tools unearthed at the site of Jebel Oraf in the Nafud desert, shows that the artifacts were used during the Neolithic time.

It sheds new light on the subsistence and lifestyle of ancient peoples that once lived in the region, according to a new study.

Re-fit of a grinding stone from Jebel Oraf © Ceri Shipton

Re-fit of a grinding stone from Jebel Oraf, Saudi Arabia. Image credit: Ceri Shipton

In recent years, studies have revealed that the now-arid region of northern Arabia was once much wetter and greener, providing Neolithic human populations with access to both water and game. The present aridity of the region, however, preserves little organic matter, making a reconstruction of the Neolithic lifestyle difficult.

Now, in a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE, researchers from the Max Planck Insтιтute of Geoanthropology, the National Research Council of Italy, Insтιтute of Heritage Science (CNR ISPC), and University College London present use-wear analysis of grinding tools recovered from Jebel Oraf in the Nefud desert of Saudi Arabia, revealing new insights into this little-understood chapter of the human story.

Use-wear analysis shows that grinding tools were used for the processing of bone, pigment and plants, and were sometimes re-used for different purposes during their life span, before finally being broken up and placed on hearths.

The team  use high-powered microscopes to compare use-wear patterns on the archaeological tools with those on experimental tools. In experiments, the grinding of grains, other plants, bone or pigment produces distinctive macro- and micro-traces on the tools’ used surface, including fractures, edge rounding of individual grains, levelled areas, striations, and different types of polish.

These distinctive traces were also identified on the Neolithic grinding tools, allowing the scientists to determine which materials were being processed.

Study: Grinding Tools Were Once Used In Plant, Pigment And Bone Processing At Jebel Oraf Site, Saudi Arabia

View across the site (top left) and a selection of grinding stones in varying degrees of preparation through pecking and grinding found at the site. Scale is 30 cm long. Note that Jebel Oraf is visible in the background on the left of the top left image.  Source

Although faunal remains have previously revealed that meat was cooked and consumed at Jebel Oraf, wear patterns indicate that meat and bones were first processed on grindstones, revealing the possibility that bones were broken to access bone marrow.

Grinding tools were also used to process plants. While there is no evidence for domesticated grains in northern Arabia in this period, the authors argue that wild plants were ground and perhaps baked into simple breads.

“The hearths where we found the grinding tools were extremely short-lived, and people may have been very mobile – breads would have made a good and easily transportable food for them,” says Maria Guagnin, researcher at the Max Planck Insтιтute of Geoanthropology and one of the study’s lead authors.

The researchers also found evidence of pigment processing, which they argue may be linked to Neolithic paintings. Their findings reveal that pigment was ground and processed on a much larger scale than previously ᴀssumed, suggesting there may have been more painted Neolithic rock art than the few surviving panels suggest.

“It is clear grinding tools were important for the Neolithic occupants of Jebel Oraf. Many were heavily used, and some even had holes in them that suggest they were transported. That means people carried heavy grinding tools with them and their functionality must have been an important element in daily life,” says Giulio Lucarini of the National Research Council of Italy, the study’s other lead author.

This type of analysis has only rarely been applied to archaeological materials from the Arabian peninsula, but can provide important information on the manufacture, use, and re-use of grinding tools, which in turn provides insight into the subsistence, economy, and art of the people who produced them.

Researchers involved in this study work in close partnership with the Saudi Ministry of Culture. Additional partners include King Saud University and key insтιтutions in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Australia.

Paper

  1. Giulio Lucarini, Maria Guagnin, Ceri Shipton, Anita Radini, Abdullah M. Alsharekh, Michael Petraglia. Plant, pigment, and bone processing in the Neolithic of northern Arabia–New evidence from Use-wear analysis of grinding tools at Jebel Oraf. –  PLOS ONE, 2023; 18 (10): e0291085 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291085

Written by Conny Waters – AncientPages.com Staff Writer

 

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