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Analysis of a protohistoric net from Shahi Tump,Baluchistan (Pakistan)
Authors:Romain Thomas  Margareta Tengberg  Christophe Moulhérat  Vincent Marcon  Roland Besenval
Institution:1.Natural History Museum of Paris,UMR 7207 MNHN-CNRS-UPMC, Centre de recherche sur la paléobiodiversité et les Paléoenvironnements,Paris,France;2.Natural History Museum of Paris,UMR 7209 MNHN-CNRS Archéozoologie, archéobotanique: Sociétés, pratiques et environnements,Paris,France;3.Quai Branly Museum,Paris,France;4.National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS),UMR 9993 CNRS Centre de recherches archéologiques Indus-Baluchistan-Asie centrale et orientale,Paris,France
Abstract:The fire that partly destroyed a 4th millennium BCE building at Shahi Tump in the Kech Valley of south-western Pakistan is responsible for the exceptional preservation by carbonisation of a net found on the burnt floor as a heap of entangled cords and knots. Macro- and microscopic observation has allowed a reconstruction of the techniques used to manufacture the net from a two-strand plied cord. The comparison of the phytoliths extracted from the archaeological net to those from a modern reference collection suggests the use of fibres that originate from the leaves of a local palm species: the desert palm or Nannorrhops ritchieana (Griff.) Aitch. Besides the technical and archaeobotanical aspects of the study, the paper discussed past and present uses of the desert palm in the arid regions of the Middle East as well as the possible utilisation (fishing, carrying etc.) of the protohistoric net.
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