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A zoomorphic sickle terminal from the Natufian site of Wadi Hammeh 27 in Jordan
Authors:Rosie Robertson  Rosemary Coates
Institution:1. Department of Archaeology &2. History, La Trobe University, Victoria, Australia;3. Natural History Illustration Research Group, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:Excavations at the Natufian site of Wadi Hammeh 27 in Jordan undertaken in 2014 led to the discovery of several new portable art pieces, including the representation of an ungulate mammal (RN 140226), probably intended as a gazelle, carved in the round from bone. The small object was extensively damaged by fire and had become separated at its neck from longer pieces of fragmented, burnt bone lying distally to it. This configuration and the style of the animal head leads us to interpret the piece as the decorated terminal of a bone sickle haft. The piece is unusual in that is it is one of the few figurative Natufian art pieces with incised geometric decoration added to its surface. Its finding extends the distribution of the ‘gazelle-headed’ sickle haft from Mount Carmel, where three well-known examples were unearthed in the early twentieth century, to the northern Jordan Valley. The piece adds to the limited repertoire of zoomorphically rendered Natufian artefacts associated with plant gathering and processing.
Keywords:Natufian art  sickles  bone artefacts  Jordan Valley  southern Levant
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