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$
65.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture. Artifact: beautiful Point, what will be much later during the Middle Paleolithic the emblematic Mousterian point. Multitask tool (side ... morescraper, end scraper, borer, axe.). Lower Paleolithic, south-west of France.
$
75.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Artifact: very nice Mousterian Point, iconic tool of Homo Neanderthalensis, here a carinated (boat shaped like) scraper. Clear retouches and marks of ... moreuse on the active edges. It was probably used also as Handaxe.
$
55.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Artifact: very nice Mousterian backed scraper, knapped by Neanderthal. This piece shows many marks of use on the ... moreactive sharp part! South-west of France, Neanderthal.
$
210.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture - Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis - Between 650 000 to 350 000 B.C. / Homo Neanderthalensis appearing from 400-350 000 B.C. This tool was ... moreclearly used as side scraper, but also as end-scraper, handsaw.
$
199.99
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Location: Lummi Island, United States
Pages: 384. The book features jewelry ranging from the splendid crowns of ancient Greece, gold earrings from Babylon, and jeweled collars worn by 13th-century ... moreIslamic royalty to more modern pieces such as those contained in the imperial collection of Queen Louise of Prussia, Art Nouveau jewelry designed by René Lalique, and work by contemporary designers.
$
89.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France. Scraper on 2 sides, one long lateral + front, burin (chisel) on the point. Large side-scraper and burin on ... moreflake. Lower Paleolithic - Acheulian. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Very nice Mousterian scraper and burin. Made by Neanderthal, middle paleolithic, south-west of France. Origin: Bergerac area, Dordogne, France.
$
120.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Big Mousterian bifacial sidescraper! Middle paleolithic tool. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection. It has been found in the 1960-1970's.
$
120.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Artifact: beautiful triangular tool, unifacial (on flake), handaxe like, with one side (the right one) showing nice retouches. One side has heavy calcification. ... moreMultitask tool, probably handaxe, more surely side scraper / end scraper / knife.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. South-west of France, Neanderthal. Tool: small scraper on Levallois flake. The active parts are on side but also ... moreat the point (as convergent scraper / burin). Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
85.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Lower Paleolithic / Acheulean. Artifact: very nice Acheulean Scraper on large retouched flat flake. Marks of use and retouches clearly visible on the ... moreactive sharp sides. Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis - South-West of France.
$
37.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Type of tool: Mousterian double scraper, both sharp side, denticulate, being ... moreactive. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Artifact: very nice side-scraper on flake, with important marks of use and small retouches on the active semi-circular part. South-west of France, Neanderthal. ... moreMousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. This kind of scraper was also used as knife and / or handaxe.
$
120.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Lower Paleolithic - Acheulean culture. The chopper is, along with biface, the multitask tool of the Acheulean culture. Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis (before ... moreNeanderthal). Very nice chopper in chalcedony.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: side scraper on Levallois core / nucleus. Marks of use on the active parts. ... moreOrigin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
110.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Bifacial knapping, many retouches. Late Upper Paleolithic / early Neolithic from France. Very interesting flaked axe. Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, ... moreFrance. Professionnal Antique dealer from France.
$
70.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Heidelbergensis or Neanderthal. Lower Paleolithic - Acheulean culture. Tool: point shaped backed scraper. Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France. The ... moreearly Mousterian Point ?. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection.
$
39.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Artifact: very nice convergent scraper Levallois. Marks of use on the active sharp sides. South-west of France, ... moreNeanderthal. Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
55.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Artifact: very nice Mousterian Point, iconic tool of Homo Neanderthalensis. This Point is a backed scraper, with ... morenice retouches and marks of use on the active edges.
$
129.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture - Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis - Between 650 000 to 350 000 B.C. Tool: very impressive Cleaver in sandstone. Clear marks of knapping ... moreand marks of use on the active sharp parts. Made by Homo Heidelbergensis, the ancestor of Neanderthal.
$
24.85
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Location: EVESHAM, United Kingdom
The Aterian is associated with early Homo sapiens at a number of sites in Morocco. Such examples of shell 'beads' have been found far inland, suggesting ... morethe presence of long distance social networks.
$
45.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian blade + end scraper on large flake Middle Paleolithic. This tool is a very nice collector. It was found in the 1970's in Dordogne region, Bergerac ... morearea, France. Very nice retouches on one side!
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Tool: very nice Mousterian blade / side scraper ! Marks of use on the 2 lateral active parts. South-west of France, ... moreNeanderthal. Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
129.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Massive Mousterian Point, with marks of use on the 2 active side. Middle Paleolithic, France.
$
39.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: very nice multitask tool on flake: blade, scraper, burin. Origin: south of Bergerac, ... moreDordogne, France. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
39.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Neanderthal, middle paleolithic, south-west of France - Mousterian culture. Backed knife / scraper on flake. Origin: Bergerac area, Dordogne, France. ... moreMarks of use and small retouches.
$
49.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: very nice Mousterian Point on large flake, this one used as convergent nosed ... morescraper and side scraper. Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
85.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Homo Heidelbergensis or early Neanderthal - France. Lower Paleolithic / Acheulean. Very nice blade / knife on flake. Professionnal antique dealer from ... moreFrance. Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France.
$
89.99
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Location: Lummi Island, United States
(2) The Upper Paleolithic Revolution. The book is broken down into manageable chapters by chronologic or geographic divisions. I also now have a long ... morelist of sites to do further research on. All in all, a valuable book.
$
190.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Multitask tool, one side shows marks of use as tranchet axe (hachereau). Tool: Acheulean Handaxe / Biface. Acheulean culture - Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis ... more- Between 650 000 to 350 000 B.C. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
39.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Artifact: side scraper (backed scraper) in chalcedony, made by Homo Neanderthalensis on a Levallois core (Nucleus ... moreLevallois). South-west of France, Neanderthal.
$
139.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
This axe is from an ancient collection. It has been found in the 1960-1970's. The poor context of neolithic artifacts make think that this axe is still ... morefrom the paleolithic. Material: Jasper/Flint.
$
60.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Very nice Mousterian Point ! Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: Dordogne, France, Bergerac area. Professionnal antique ... moredealer from France.
$
55.94
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Location: READING, United Kingdom
Found in East Africa. Check out my other listings. Fast postage. See photos carefully
$
69.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture. Tool: early Mousterian Point - multitask tool (scraper lateral and convergent, handaxe, borer, etc). Lower Paleolithic, South-West ... moreof France. Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Tool: very nice Mousterian side scraper and knife on flake. South-west of France, Neanderthal. Origin: south of ... moreBergerac, Dordogne, France. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection.
$
50.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean / Early Mousterian tool - Lower Paleolithic. Cleaver (hachereau). Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France. Was also used also as side scraper. ... moreOn this artifact, one side has clear retouches.
$
47.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Nice scraper on emblematic Neanderthal core (nucleus) "turtle shell". Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: Dordogne, ... moreFrance, Bergerac area.
$
70.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Interesting notch also, at the basis of the tool. Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: Dordogne, France, Bergerac area.
$
85.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Large scraper, bifacial knapping. Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: Dordogne, France, Bergerac area. Professionnal ... moreantique dealer from France.
$
40.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - North of France. Tool: very nice tool in black flint made by Neanderthal. Origin: region Hauts-de-France, ... morePas de Calais, France. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
120.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture - Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis - Between 650 000 to 350 000 B.C. Professionnal antique dealer from France. Lower Paleolithic artifact ... more- France, Dordogne region. Origin: Bergerac région, Dordogne, France.
$
29.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Late Neanderthal - Dordogne, France. Middle to upper Paleolithic. Very nice scraper on flake. Almost all sides are active and show retouches/ marksof ... moreuse. It was discovered in 1960/1970's. Origin: Bergerac area, Dordogne, France.
$
49.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. South-west of France, Neanderthal. Artifact: interesting carinated scraper and Burin (chisels) in white flint. ... moreThis tool was used for precise scrapping work and engraving work.
$
50.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian "turtle shell" - Bifacial scraper on nucleus / core. The Mousterian "turtle shell" is first a nucleus knapped on both side from the centre ... moreof the flint. The edges created were then good for using it as scraper.
$
59.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Beautiful end scraper, active also as side scraper. Clear retouches and marks of use ... moreon the active parts; bifacial knapping. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Mousterian side scraper and burin. Marks of use on the active side. Secondary use ... moreas burin (chisel). Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal. Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection. It has been ... morefound in the 1960-1970's. The point may have been used as burin.
$
55.00
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Location: Fort Lauderdale, United States
Old Palaeolitic Shopper With Certificat this,piece is in great condition , intact , beautiful patina , find in marcilly sur vienne France shipped with ... moreUSPS Priority Mail.
$
70.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: Large Mousterian end- scraper, made on large flake, with a part of cortex left ... moreon the upper side. The marks of use showthat the scraper was also used as side-scraper, and convergent scraper on the point.
$
120.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Lower Paleolithic - Acheulean. Weight: 779g. This tool was found in the 1970's in Dordogne region, Bergerac area, France. Huge scraper, prob. butchery ... moretool. Clear retouches on the active side.
$
69.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Tool: carinated scraper (boat shape), with nice retouches on the lateral active side. Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: ... moreDordogne, France, Bergerac area.
$
75.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Acheulean culture - Homo Erectus Heidelbergensis - Between 650 000 to 350 000 B.C. / Homo Neanderthalensis appearing from 400-350 000 B.C. Tool: impressive ... morePoint. Lower Paleolithic artifact - France, Dordogne region.
$
75.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Lower Paleolithic - Acheulean culture. Very nice Acheulean Chopping-Tool (knapped on both side) in chalcedony, one of the oldest tool of Humanity ! Multitask ... moretool, often opportunist (made in situ for direct use).
$
35.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: side scraper / blade on Levallois flake. Marks of use and tiny retouches on ... morethe active parts. This very nice piece is from an ancient collection.
$
90.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Very nice Mousterian Point ! Middle Paleolithic, France. Origin: Dordogne, France, Bergerac area. Professionnal antique ... moredealer from France.
$
45.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian / Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal - South-west of France. Tool: nice Mousterian scraper made on core (nucleus). Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, ... moreFrance. Professionnal antique dealer from France.
$
67.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Tool: very nice Mousterian backed and notched scraper, with retouches on the sharp active part. South-west of ... moreFrance, Neanderthal. Origin: south of Bergerac, Dordogne, France.
$
50.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Mousterian culture, Middle Paleolithic. Tool: very nice Mousterian notched scraper (backed scraper). Marks of use on the active sharp side. The notch ... morewas made to peel wood, bones, reindeer antlers.
$
69.00
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Location: Bonneville, France
Tool: large backed scraper, with denticulate knapping on the sharp side, showing retouches. Mousterian culture - Neanderthal. Middle Paleolithic, France. ... moreOrigin: Dordogne, France, Bergerac area.
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Terrific Burin on Concave Retouched Truncation, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic
Terrific Burin on Concave Retouched Truncation. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Description Type: burin on concave retouched truncation on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic. From Gravettian to Magdalenian. Dating: approx. 29.000 B.P to 13.000 B.P. Description: Size: length 5.5 cm, weight 23 grams, Shape. Retouch: a terrific burin on concave retouched truncation on elongated. Quite sturdy flake: the end towards the top of the pictures has the great concave retouch at the distal end, one long, and the short rest of a second long burin blow at the right edge. The other end is partly covered with matrix from the original site layer, it could be a second burin, with wide, deep burin blows left and right of the nose. The matrix can easlily be removed with lemon acid or concentrated lemon juice– we leave this to the new owner, Raw-material: ... morebright gray-white marbled patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a famous settlement site in the Department Dordogne which was occupied in Gravettian. Solutrean and Magdalenian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Stunning Burin on Retouched Truncation, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Stunning Burin on Retouched Truncation. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: burin on oblique retouched truncation on blade. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.2 cm, weight 14 grams, Shape. Retouch: a stunning burin on oblique retouched truncation on proximal blade segment. The retouched truncation is at the distal part of the right edge. At least 4 burin blows were made at the left edge(of the exterior side) the first one is long and stopped by a lateral retouch, the others are very short, ending in hinge fractures. Stunnung is the nose at the distal end, designed by a fine retouch at both sides and both edges. Raw-material: gray flint with some spotted bright patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. ... moreOrigin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
RARE PALEOLITHIC STONE PAINT TATTOOING Ceremonial BOWL TOOL Arrowhead Point
PALEOLITHIC STONE TOOL RARE CEREMONIAL CUP Paint or Tattooing Neat Cup! Fits Into Your Thumb& Index Finger Simply Fantastic! Scars of a Paleo-Indian Knapping ~ Percussion Points Bulb of Percussion Check Images Closely They are Part of the Description Specimen Dimensions: 2-1/2” Wide 1-1/4" Thick 2-1/8" Long 185 Grams Our Small Team of Amateur Archaeologists Watched as a Team Member Recovered This Artifact Our Specimens& Artifacts are Legally Collected On Privately Deeded Lands with the Full Knowledge And Consent of the Property Owner Thanks For Looking We Will Be Selling More Artifacts& Fossils To Help Us With Future Site Work
Beautiful Blade w. Retouched Truncation, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Beautiful Blade w. Retouched Truncation. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: laterally retouched blade with retouched truncation. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.1 cm, weight 8 grams, Shape. Retouch: a beautiful slender medial blade segment with retouched truncation at the distal end(pictures 3. 4) and a reworked break at the proximal end: the left part of the end and the proximal part of the lateral edge(pictures 5,6) have a fine retouch, forming a small nose/ borer, a type of working edge which was very common in Mousterian and Upper Paleolithic. And the right edge of the interior has a fine retouch. Raw-material: gray-brown flint with some matrix from the original site still adhering to both sides of the tool, ... morePreservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Unusual Flint Scraper and More Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Unusual Flint Scraper and More Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: scraper and more on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.7 cm, weight 52 grams, Shape. Retouch: an unusual tool on sturdy. Angular flake. The distal end(can best be seen in picture 2, interior side) is wide with broadly serrated retouch(see picture 6 and 7) and a small nose at each end. The right lateral edge is the scraper(pictures 4 and 5) with a splintered use-scar on the interior side(picture 6, left beside the nose, covered with matrix) The left lateral edge also has a continuous retouch and might also have been used for scraping. Interesting is the straight edge at the bottom(picture 8) also with continuous fine retouch. This ... moreedge is a deep hinge fracture, it reminds of an overhang in the mountains, Raw-material: dark gray flint with some spotted bright patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we pr
Fantastic Denticulated Flint Blade, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Fantastic Denticulated Flint Blade. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: strangulated/ denticulated blade w. retouched truncation. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.5 cm, weight 45 grams, Shape. Retouch: strangulated/ denticulated blades are very typical for the Aurignacian industry. This one here is a medial segment of a huge blade. With retouched truncation at the distal end and a partly blunted proximal end. Both lateral edges are broadly denticulated, the left edge with splintered use-scars on the interior side. Raw-material: marbled gray patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated ... morein the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Splendid Neanderthal Chalcedony Knife, Paleolithic Mousterian approx 50.000 BC
Splendid Neanderthal Chalcedony Knife. Paleolithic Mousterian approx 50.000 BC Description Type: knife/ laterally retouched flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic: Mousterian. Dating: ca. 250.000 to 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.5 cm, weight 15 grams, Shape. Retouch: a splendid thin flake/ knife with cortex at the left edge and part of the face. The thin straight right edge has fine retouch/ use-wear, Raw-material: beautiful creamy tan patinated chalcedony with a fine gloss, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a large Neanderthal workshop site at a chalcedony raw-material deposit in southern France, We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special ... moreor exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Fantastic Neanderthal Convex Quina Scraper, Paleolithic Mousterian 70.000 BC
Fantastic Neanderthal Convex Quina Scraper. Paleolithic Mousterian 70.000 BC Description Type: convex Quina scraper on Levallos core. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic: Quina Mousterian. Dating: approx. 75.000 to 65.000 B.C. Isotope stage 4, the first cold maximum of the last glaciation in Europe, where climatic conditions were harsh and extremely cold. Description: Size: length 6.4 cm, weight 75 grams, Shape. Retouch: a fantastic convex Quina scraper on Levallois remnant core(rarely found) The scraper has a gorgeous stepped Quina retouch. And the other lateral edge is also retouched. Flaking direction on the core’s reduction face(which is the interior side of the scraper) is shown. Picture 8 shows the upper end of the scraper, picture 9 the bottom end(former platform of the core) Raw-material: beautifully marbled patinated ... moreflint, Preservation: very well: the tool has one small flat recent scar at the proximal end of the scraper edge which in no way detracts from value and beauty of this fantastic tool! Additional Information. Literature: Some characteristics of the Quina Mousterian industry: only little Levallois technique was used. But Clacton flakes were preferred, no handaxes were found in the assemblages, a very high percentage of scrapers with lateral, double, convergent, transverse as most common ones, and sometimes small very thin scrapers with a very fine stepped retouch. Preferred retouch was the stepped/ or Quina retouch, made with hard strikes first which produced broad, irregular flake negatives and secondary refining retouches directly at the edges in a second step. Origin. Site: the famous(eponymous) site of La Quina. Charente, France, excavated by Dr. Henri-Martin from 1905 to 1936. A total of 27 Neanderthal individuals were found, the most famous is"Homo 5" We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional
Amazing Neanderthal Pointed Flint Scraper, Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian
Amazing Neanderthal Pointed Flint Scraper. Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian Description Type: pointed scraper on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic/ Mousterian. Dating: the particular site from approx. 130.000 B.C. stage 6 of the oxygen-isotope chronology up to approx. 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.2 cm, weight 15 grams, Shape. Retouch: an amazing pointed scraper on elongated flake. The steep right edge is the scraper. The right edge of the tip is beautifully trimmed. The long narrow flake scar at the left edge of the tip looks like a burin blow, but we don’t think it is one because too unusual(too narrow) on a Neanderthal tool. It rather is a use-scar which is reworked with very fine retouch directly at the tip. Raw-material: marbled grey-white patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. ... moreSite: a famous Paleolithic site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne river. Dept. Dordogne, France, occupied by the Neanderthals. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Fabulous Neanderthal Nosed Flint Endscraper, Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian
Fabulous Neanderthal Nosed Flint Endscraper. Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian Description Type: nosed endscraper on Levallois flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic. Mousterian. Dating: the particular site from approx. 130.000 B.C. Stage 6 of the oxygen-isotope chronology, up to ca. 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 4.7 cm, weight 17 grams, Shape. Retouch: a fabulous and rare tool with repect to Mousterian types! It is an atypical Levallois point with thick proximal and thin distal end. It reminds of a Tayac point. Because of thick, triangular, sturdy pointed shape, but the edges aren’t notched, so no Tayac point. The medial ridge which guided removal from the core divides into two ridges at the distal end, forming a wedge-shaped nosed endscraper with fine retouch. Retouch at the left lateral edge is continuous and alternating(pictures ... more5, 6) and fine at the right edge(picture 7) The thick proximal end is thinned on the interior side, point of percussion, bulb and part of the platform remnant are removed(last picture) Raw-material: flint with thick white patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a famous Paleolithic site near the Dordogne valley. Dept. Dordogne, France, occupied by the Neanderthals. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform h
FANTASTIC PALEOLITHIC BIFACE
Beautiful Paleolithic. Acheulean handaxe. Biface from North Africa guaranteed authentic, appr. 300.000- 200.000 B.P. lenght appr. 90 mm. Wide appr. 75 mm, weight 226 grams! Old german collection!
3 Paleolithic Aterian and 4 Mesolithic Sahara Meoslithic stone tools
Lot Description: This is a group of 3 Aterian tools and 4 Mesolithic unifacial blades found in the Sahara desert. In the region of Morocco. The Aterian tools were used during a wet period in the Sahara 40.000 to 30,000 years ago. The Aterian culture disapperaed from the Sahara about 30.0000 years ago as the area became dryer and inhospitable. During later wet periods(corresponding to the Ice Ages in northern Europe) subsequent cultures re-popolulated areas of the Sahara leaving behind more refined tool types during the later Mesolithic and Neolithic eras. This tools wass probably used for cutting and scrapping of hides. Many of the times the tips of these points are worked around rather than coming to a sharpe tip necessary for a spear point. It could be that these tools started as a spear point and were later re-purposed into hafted scrappers. ... moreThe tips do show that they were worked into the configuration. Whatever the case they are interesting relics with thick patination and are sand polished from sitting in wind-blown deserts for many thousands of years. Early tools like are very interesting. It was the tools which gave early man the ability to hunt for meat. Meat allowed our brains and inteligence to expand. Contemporary hominids who did not hunt but grazed on plant matter did not evolove and became extinct. It was tool usage which allowed us(Homo Sapien Sapien) emerge and become masters of the world. The unifacial Mesolithic blades were struck from a core at a much later time about 8.000 years ago and were the main tool technology proior to the Mesolithic and early Neolithic era. The largest Aterian tool is 2 7/16th inches(62 mm) The smallest Aterian tool is 1 1/2 inches(42 mm) The condition is good. There are ancient dings to a few of these, as can be expected with working tools; most are complete. See picture for details. The color in hand. Is better than the picture indicates. The natural light somehow washes out the color or maybe it's my photography skills. I need a light box! These relics are r
28 Sahara Neolithic relics - tools, celt, beads, and 1 paleolithic tool.
This group of 28 Sahara Neolithic relics. PLUS one Paleolithic Aterian tool, is composed of diverse types of relics, which were discovered on ancient habitation sites deep in the western Sahara desert, mostly in the vicinity of northern Muaratania/Mali but also includes two trianglar'Eiffel Tower' poinst from Algeria. This group consist of several type of projectile points from varying periods of the Neolithic era. Including ovate, stemmed, triangular, and unifacial tool forms. In all there are 18 Neolithic stone projectile points and tools including: two early unifacial tools(toward lrt, bottom row) and one crescent blade(sickle bit) Also from the Neolithic era are 5 nice biconically drilled hard-stone beads, four partial(not complete) pottery beads(Mauratania) and one hard stone celt. At the upper right you will see an Aterian tool ... morefrom the Sahara. This is the earlier known type of stone tool with a stem for hafting. Probably used to serve as a knife/scrapper. This tool is VERY old with weathered features and thick white patina. The point has been worked into a shape for cutting/scrapping and was probably a hafted scrapper rather than a spear point(possibly re-purposed) This type of tool was used during a wet period in the Sahara 40,000 to 30,000 years ago; this relic is 1 15/16th inches(50 mm) long. The Aterian culture disapperaed from the Sahara about 30.0000 years ago. During later wet periods(corresponding to the Ice Ages in northern Europe) later cultures re-popolulated areas of the Sahara leaving different tool types in the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras. This is one of the more diverse offering of ancient Sahara relics you will find in one lot. The shortest point is 7/8th inch(23 mm) The longest tool is 2 3/16th inches(55 mm) long The celt is 1 3/16th inch(30 mm) long. Heel to bit. Th ese are everyday work tools and adornments used. And lost or discarded by our Neolithic and earlier hunter-gatherer ancestors. They are all honest, authentic relics in good shape, some will exhibit minor an
French paleolithic: Mousterian chisel (-100 000 / - 41 000 YO)
FRENCH MOUSTERIAN FLINT Collected in Normandy-France in 19 6 0-75(Old collection E. Doruard) the tools that I propose for sale are from old excavations and collections made ​​after the Second World War by collectors scholars. As such, they were reported and listed at the time of their discovery. Today. It is forbidden to search for prehistoric tools. So you have now a rare opportunity to acquire objects exeptionals man-made there are hundreds of thousands of years. Year after year fewer and fewer objects will be found in the circuits of auction or at very high price( the stock are not repeated! To be sure to be kept informed of my new sales, add me to your! Mousterian Chisel* Area/context: Calvados(Normandy) West of Paris Basin. Occupation area of neanderthal and Omo Erectus Period: Mousterian(middle paleolithic) 300 000- 30 000 BC. Mousterian ... moreis a name given by archaeologists to a style of predominantly flint tools(or industry) associated primarily with Homo neanderthalensis and dating to the Middle Paleolithic. The middle part of the Old Stone Age. The culture was named after the type site of Le Moustier. A rock shelter in the Dordogne region of France. Similar flintwork has been found all over unglaciated Europe and also the Near East and North Africa. Handaxes, racloirs and points constitute the industry; sometimes a Levallois technique or another prepared-core technique was employed in making the flint flakes. Wikipedia) Type of artefact: Interesting and rare chisel Superb retouchs Famous provenance and fabulous flint color No recent accident. Perfect condition! black patina very homogeneous and esthetic( the flint patina is a very good evidence to considerate the authenticity of prehistoric flint artefact. A very long period is necessary to get it(be careful of the recents imitations) Size/weight: 10 X 2 cms- 98 grs S pectacular collector's item! Please. Do not hesitate to Check out my! Paiement and shipping informations* Shipments went all on Wednesday. Af
19109 Upper Paleolithic Aterian flint point c. 35.000 years old
Pay only £ 0.50 shipping costs for each additional item! Shippingcosts are £ 1.75 inside the United kingdom, you pay only £ 0.50 shipping for each additional item. Shippingcosts: inside the European Union: £ 1.75 Shippingcosts: inside other European countries: £ 1.75 Shippingcosts to all other countries: £ 1.75 We charge the shipping amount for the item with the highest shipping cost. Plus an additional £ 0.50 for each additional item purchased. IMPORTANT NOTE: Correct combined shipping amounts will not show automatically via eBay. If you need a combined invoice. Please let me know by e-mail before you pay the item. ID number: 19109 Upper Paleolithic Aterian flint point c. 35.000 years old Material: Flint Region of origin: areas of North Africa and the Holy Lands Date: Upper Paleolithic. C. 35.000 years ... moreold Size: See photo( is in cm) cm Condition: see photo Estimated value: £ 20/ £ 25 Provenance: from an old European. Dutch collection Please add us to your favorite stores To receive regular updates of our new listings
26 Sahara Neolithic relics - tools, celt, beads, and 1 paleolithic tool.
This group of 26 Sahara Neolithic relics. PLUS one Paleolithic Aterian tool, is composed of diverse types of relics, which were discovered on ancient habitation sites deep in the western Sahara desert, mostly in the vicinity of northern Muaratania/Mali but also includes two trianglar'Eiffel Tower' poinst from Algeria. This group consist of several type of projectile points from varying periods of the Neolithic era. Including ovate, stemmed, triangular, and unifacial tool forms. In all there are 18 Neolithic stone projectile points and tools including: two early unifacial tools(bottom, and one crescent blade(sickle bit) Also from the Neolithic era are 5 biconically drilled hard-stone beads, two partial pottery beads(Mauratania) and one hard stone celt. At the upper right you will see an Aterian tool from the Sahara. This is the earlier ... moreknown type of stone tool with a stem for hafting. Probably used to serve as a knife/scrapper. This tool is VERY old with weathered features and thick orange patina. The point has been worked into a shape for cutting/scrapping and was probably a hafted scrapper rather than a spear point(possibly re-purposed) This type of tool was used during a wet period in the Sahara 40,000 to 30,000 years ago; this relic is 1 3/4th inches(45 mm) long. The Aterian culture disapperaed from the Sahara about 30.0000 years ago. During later wet periods(corresponding to the Ice Ages in northern Europe) later cultures re-popolulated areas of the Sahara leaving different tool types in the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras. This is one of the more diverse offering of ancient Sahara relics you will find in one lot. The shortest point is 3/4th inch(20 mm) The longest toos is 2 1/8th inches(55 mm) long The celt is 1 1/16th inch(27 mm) long. Heel to bit. Th ese are everyday work tools and adornments used. And lost or discarded by our Neolithic and earlier hunter-gatherer ancestors. They are all honest, authentic relics in good shape, some will exhibit minor ancient damage(as seen in he photograph)
Inca Treasures Ltd Neolithic fossil ammonite Paleolithic, nautilus shell
Beautiful specimen of a Neolithic fossil ammonite of the nautiloid variety. Easy to see the spiral chambers where the mollusk fossil lived as it's shell grew. These extinct fossil ammonite forms lived from about 250 million years until their extinction about 65 million years ago. Thus specimen is from Madagascar. Size:5 inches by 4 inches Specimen: ammonoid nautilus mollusk fossil CA: 150 million years old See my other pre Columbian pottery. Art and artifacts See pics and ask questions before bidding. Inca Treasures LTD
VERY RARE BONE KNIFE, PALEOLITHIC 10.000 yeras old
VERY RARE BONE KNIFE. PALEOLITHIC 10.000 yeras old I ACCEPT PAYMENT WITH: PAYPAL BANK TRANSFER
Inca Treasures Ltd pair of fossil Paleolithic clams, mollusks Jurassic era relic
Nice pair of polished Jurassic park Neolithic/paleolithic clams from Madagascar for sale as a pair. They are beautiful specimens. Use as paper weight or ornaments. Great fossil pieces from the Jurassic period about 150 million years ago. size: 3 inches long and 21/2 inches wide: smaller 21/2 inches long. 2 inches wide. found: Madagascar. CA: 150 million years ago. Inca Treasues LTD. RcmdId ViewItemDescV4,RlogId p4%60bo7%60jtb9%3Fvo%7B%3Dd70f%2Bf%60%60%3E-145468e3b7d-0x112-
Amazing Flint Borer, Upper Paleolithic Magdalenian, Famous Provenance 11.000 BC
Amazing Flint Borer. Upper Paleolithic Magdalenian, Famous Provenance 11.000 BC Description Type: borer on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Palaeolithic. Magdalenian IV- VI. Dating: the particular site between C 14 13.440 +/ 300 and 12.640 +/+ 260 B.P. Description: Size: length 4.8 cm, weight 11 grams, Shape. Retouch: an amazing borer on arched flake. With a very pointed awl. Part of the awl is cortical, and it has a ridge, both adding to the tool’s resistance. The right edge of the awl has a careful retouch, Raw-material: gray– brown marbled flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: La Madeleine. The eponymous site for the Magdalenian industry, commune Tursac, Vézere valley, Dept. Dordogne, France. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? ... moreDon’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Terrific Multiple Flint Burin, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Gravettian 27.000 BC
Terrific Multiple Flint Burin. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Gravettian 27.000 BC Description Type: mutiple burin on straight retouched truncation on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Palaeolithic. Gravettian. Dating: approx. 29.000 to 22.000 B.P. Description: Size: length 5.7 cm, weight 19 grams, Shape. Retouch: a terrific multiple burin on straight retouched truncation. This retouch is not at the distal end as usual. But at the steep concave right lateral edge(part of a core’s ridge) a splendid back when using the tool. Burin blows were made at the left edge, the first one is long with a gentle convex bow. Below the blows is a fine retouch which stopped the first blow. Raw-material: grey flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a famous Gravettian site near the Dordogne valley. Dept. Dordogne, France. We have ... morebeen listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 7.60(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Excellent Flint Blade w. Concave Retouched Truncation - Notch, Upper Paleolithic
Excellent Flint Blade w. Concave Retouched Truncation- Notch. Upper Paleolithic Description Type: blade with concave retouched truncation and notch. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic. From Gravettian to Magdalenian. Dating: approx. 29.000 B.P to 13.000 B.P. Description: Size: length 5.8 cm, weight 14 grams, Shape. Retouch: this great blade is of arched shape. It’s distal end has an excellent unique retouch: the concave part has a significant continuous retouch, and the end/ tip has a deep notch, perfect for polishing needles and other small tools of wood, bone or antler. The left edge of the interior side has a continuous retouch. Proximal end is a genuine old break, with the end of a fomer burin blow, Raw-material: marbled gray patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a famous settlement site ... morein the Department Dordogne which was occupied in Gravettian. Solutrean and Magdalenian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 7.70(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On demand we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Terrific Burin on Retouched Truncation, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Terrific Burin on Retouched Truncation. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: burin on oblique retouched truncation on first order ridge blade. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.8 cm, weight 28 grams, Shape. Retouch: a terrific large burin on oblique retouched truncation on first order ridge-blade. The former core’s ridge is now the right part of the blade’s exterior side. It has been narrowed down at the distal part with more flaking. Fine edge flaking included. 4 burin blows were made at the left edge, the first, longest one is stopped by a lateral retouch below. Raw-material: Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, ... morefirst excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Fantastic Large Flint Blade, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Fantastic Large Flint Blade. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: laterally retouched blade with retouched truncation. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 8.7 cm, weight 33 grams, Shape. Retouch: a terrific large. Wide, and thin blade of slightly arched shape. The very thin distal end is a finely retouched truncation, the proximal part of the right edge has a significant retouch and the entireleft edge has continuous, fine retouch/ use-wear. Raw-material: dark gray flint with bright spotted patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. ... moreWe have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature. dhep.RcmdId ViewItemDescV4,RlogId p4%60bo7%60jtb9%3Fuk%601d72f%2Bishm%3Ed%7Fhep-145468e3b95-0x10a-
Great Neanderthal Flint Saw / Serrated Tool, Paleolithic Mousterian 50.000 BC
Great Neanderthal Flint Saw/ Serrated Tool. Paleolithic Mousterian 50.000 BC Description Type: transverse serrated tool/ saw on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Terminal Middle Palaeolithic: Mousterian in Acheulian Tradition. Dating: approx. 58.000 to 40.000 BC. Description: Size: length 4.0 cm, width 5,0 cm, weight 18 grams, Shape. Retouch: a great transverse saw/ serrated tool on flake with very thin. Wide straight distal end, with a great alternating serrated retouch. The corner platform remnant/ left edge of the interior side has a small retouched nose, Raw-material: gray flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a settlement site(rock shelter) in the Vézère-valley. Contemporaneous to the Neanderthal site of Le Moustier, and located not far from it. Mousterian assemblages are quite similar and comparable. ... moreWe have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Gorgeous Neanderthal Concave Scraper and More, Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian
Gorgeous Neanderthal Concave Scraper and More. Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian Description Type: concave scraper on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic/ Mousterian. Dating: the particular site from approx. 130.000 B.C. stage 6 of the oxygen-isotope chronology up to approx. 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.8 cm, weight 26 grams, Shape. Retouch: a gorgeous tool of elongated shape with a steep concave scraper at the right edge. But the tool must have had additional functions- the pointed distal end has use-scars on the interior side. And the left lateral edge has a trimmed notch, Raw-material: marbled beige-grey patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a famous Paleolithic site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne river. Dept. Dordogne, France, occupied by the Neanderthal(s) ... moreWe have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Exceptional Neanderthal Double Tool: Borer - Endscraper, Paleolithic Mousterian
Exceptional Neanderthal Double Tool: Borer- Endscraper. Paleolithic Mousterian Description Type: double tool: borer– endscraper on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic/ Mousterian. Dating: the particular site from approx. 130.000 B.C. stage 6 of the oxygen-isotope chronology up to approx. 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.3 cm, weight 18 grams, Shape. Retouch: an exceptional Mousterian double tool on elongated blade-like flake with cortical right edge. The retouch at the distal end is amazing. The medial ridge of the blade ending exactly at the pointed awl/ tip, with a man-made notch right and left– a great borer. A second small nose and notch is to the left. Proximal end is the reworked/refined platform remnant to be used as endscraper(picture 7) Raw-material: creamy patinated flint, Preservation: very well. No modern ... moredamages, Origin. Site: a famous Paleolithic site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne river. Dept. Dordogne, France, occupied by the Neanderthal(s) We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Gorgeous Quartzite Cleaver Handaxe, Paleolithic Lower Acheulian 600.000 BC
Gorgeous Quartzite Cleaver Handaxe. Paleolithic Lower Acheulian 600.000 BC Description Type: handaxe: cleaver on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Lower Palaeolithic. Lower Acheulian. Dating: archaeological research in Western Europe proved that the European continent has been conquested as early as 1.3 to 1,1 Mio years(finds of Atapuerca/ Spain) Early Pleistocene. The assignment of the oldest human finds at Atapuerca to a particular early human species as Homo erectus or Homo antecessor is still controversial. As controversially discussed is the earliest date of permanent colonization of Europe, and good dating of the high gravel terraces of southern French rivers is still lacking. So we suggest an estimated time frame of approx. 800.000 to 400.000 BP. Description: Size: length 9.6 cm, width 8,0 cm, thickness 4,3 cm, weight 395 grams, ... moreShape. Retouch: a gorgeous cleaver on flake with thick proximal and rather thin distal end. The flake is struck with the Clacton technique. Platform is small and has an angle greater than 105 degrees to the interior side. The tool has the typical cleaver retouch– a significant thinning at the left edge of the interior side, and a retouch along the straight distal end. The other lateral edge and the butt are cortical, Raw-material: a grey quartzite pebble. The most common raw-material on the Garonne terraces. Preservation: very well: few small. Flat recent chips at the edges, which in no way detract from value and beauty of this early cleaver, Additional Information. Literature: The pebble tools found on the high gravel terraces of the Garonne. Tarn and Aveyron river are among the earliest tools found in Europe. Lit: A. Tavoso, Le Paléolithique supérieur et moyen du Haut-Languedoc, Paris 1978. Origin. Site: high gravel terrace of the Garonne. South of Toulouse, southern France. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, sp
North American Paleolithic Chert Artifacts Collection w/ Weird Story..MUST READ!
Paleolithic Indian Artifacts Collection Predate Mississippian but same area The Weird Story: We owned a house in Webster Groves. MO 1980-1995. We decided to remove a very old 1940s clothesline from the back yard. Buried beneath the cement weight holding the clothesline we found these artifacts in a old sack. One piece has a painted inscription which is partially legible which appears to read"River Wen? 6/1?9" They seem to be part of some collection. This is all the information I have. They are chert. Mostly unheated. What you see is what you get I will gladly answer questions or send more photos if needed. But I do not accept returns. Free Shipping to US only
PALEOLITHIC FLINT - Arrowhead -15-
PALEOLITHIC FLINT Very nice and rare Paleolithic flint"Arrowhead" from Sahara desert. Original artifact 100% It does not have any restoration. I'm selling with NO reserve. DATING: 5000-10000 BC SIZE: cm 7 x 4.5( inch 2.7 x 1.7) AUTHENTIC 100% Contact the seller for more information Shipping cost to USA = Euro 8.00" to Europe = Euro 5.00" to Italy = Euro 3.00 MAKE REGISTERD MAIL ON DEMAND( contact the seller) SPEDIZIONE IN RACCOMANDATA SU RICHIESTA MAKE THE COMBINED SHIPMENT SI FANNO SPEDIZIONI COMBINATE ADVICE! If you want to receive the item. Complete your payment to the seller as soon possible( In 5 days) If you don't pay in 5 days, the item would return in auction and leave the negative feedback. AVVISO! Si raccomanda vivamente di effettuare il pagamento dei pezzi acquistate nelle mie aste entro 5 giorni dalla ... moredata di scadenza dell'asta.Tranne che per eventuali problemi dichiarati dal compratore se il pagamento non verrà effettuato entro i giorni stabiliti. Il pezzo verra rimesso in asta e sarà lasciato un feedback negativo al mancato acquirente. The seller is not responsible for service transit time( postal and carrier) Non mi assumo responsabilità per disguidi di carattere postale come furti. Ritardi e danni al materiale spedito. For another information contact the seller! Per ulteriori informazioni contattare il venditore!
PALEOLITHIC FLINT - Arrowhead -13-
PAEOLITHIC FLINT Very nice and rare Paleolithic flint"Arrowhead" from Sahara desert. Original artifact 100% It does not have any restoration. I'm selling with NO reserve. DATING: 5000-10000 BC SIZE: cm 8 x 3( inch 3.1 x 1.1) AUTHENTIC 100% Contact the seller for more information Shipping cost to USA = Euro 8.00" to Europe = Euro 5.00" to Italy = Euro 3.00 MAKE REGISTERD MAIL ON DEMAND( contact the seller) SPEDIZIONE IN RACCOMANDATA SU RICHIESTA MAKE THE COMBINED SHIPMENT SI FANNO SPEDIZIONI COMBINATE ADVICE! If you want to receive the item. Complete your payment to the seller as soon possible( In 5 days) If you don't pay in 5 days, the item would return in auction and leave the negative feedback. AVVISO! Si raccomanda vivamente di effettuare il pagamento dei pezzi acquistate nelle mie aste entro 5 giorni dalla ... moredata di scadenza dell'asta.Tranne che per eventuali problemi dichiarati dal compratore se il pagamento non verrà effettuato entro i giorni stabiliti. Il pezzo verra rimesso in asta e sarà lasciato un feedback negativo al mancato acquirente. The seller is not responsible for service transit time( postal and carrier) Non mi assumo responsabilità per disguidi di carattere postale come furti. Ritardi e danni al materiale spedito. For another information contact the seller! Per ulteriori informazioni contattare il venditore!
art sculpture prehistory paleolithic archaeology FDC 57670
FREE worldwide shipping for all additional items! Please type your favourite topic here: Search my eBay Store: shipping = 2$ worldwide(or 8$ registred) for 1 item and FREE for all additionnal items- NO LIMIT! Powered by The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.
History of Jewelry Ancient Paleolithic Rome Greece Persia Medieval Renaissance
TRANSLATE Arabic Chinese French German Greek Indonesian Italian Hindi Japanese Korean Swedish Portuguese Russian Spanish Jewelry From Antiquity To The Present by Clare Phillips. NOTE: We have 75.000 books in our library, almost 10,000 different titles. Odds are we have other copies of this same title in varying conditions, some less expensive, some better condition. We might also have different editions as well(some paperback, some hardcover, oftentimes international editions) If you don’t see what you want, please contact us and ask. We’re happy to send you a summary of the differing conditions and prices we may have for the same title. DESCRIPTION: Softcover: 224 pages. Publisher: Thames and Hudson; 1996) Sumptuously illustrated! From the simple shell beads worn by Paleolithic hunters to the splendor of Renaissance gold work and the sumptuousness ... moreof Art Nouveau enamels. Here is a guide to the evolution of Western jewelry, concluding with the radical and experimental developments of the last three decades. Offering a survey of the entire field, the book is organized into chronological sections starting with the ancient world and progressing through the Middle Ages and the Baroque to the Belle Epoque and Art Deco eras, finally reaching the present day. The author, Clare Phillips, analyzes jewelry's changing fashions, explores its social context, and examines how it has been worn by both men and women. She shows how jewelers have responded to new sources of gems, whether emeralds from the New World or diamonds from South Africa, and to the discovery of metals such as platinum and aluminum. Masterworks by unknown craftsmen and pieces designed by individual artists such as Holbein, Pugin and Calder, are illustrated alongside the glittering products of the major jewelry houses- Cartier, Fouquet and Faberge among others. CONDITION: NEW. New oversized softcover. Unblemished. Unmarked, pristine in every respect. Pages are pristine; clean, crisp, unmarked, unmutilated, tightly bound, unambiguously unread. Satisfac
French Lower paleolithic : Impressive Acheulean Handaxe (-550 000 / -300 000 BC)
FRENCH ACHEULEAN FLINT Collected in Normandy(west of France) by local finders in 1970-75(Old collection E. Doruard) ARCHAIC HANDAXE Area/context: Calvados(Normandy) West of Paris Basin. Occupation area of neanderthal(550 000- 4 1 000 BC) and Omo Sapiens(approx. 40 0 00 BC) Period: Acheulean(Upper paleolithic) 550 000/ 300 000 BC) Type of artefact: Enormous Archaic Acheulean Handaxe Very Interesting tool. Rare! Large retouchs on the active side of the tool- Nice patina No recent accident. Perfect condition! P atina very homogeneous and esthetic( the flint patina is a very good evidence to considerate the authenticity of prehistoric flint artefact. A very long period is necessary to get it(be careful of the recents imita tions! Size/weight: 15 X 9 cms- 422 grs S pectacular collector's item! More informations will be communicated with the ... moreartefact(documentation concerning others tools found on the same area + locali s ation) Thèmes: Neolithique/neolithic Paleolithique/Paleolithic Silex Prehistoric tools
Absolutely Stunning Giant Blade, Upper Paleolithic Europe Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Absolutely Stunning Giant Blade. Upper Paleolithic Europe Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: laterally retouched blade with endscraper. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 12.2 cm, weight 70 grams, Shape. Retouch: an absolutely stunning large blade of slightly arched shape. Distal end is cortical with endscraper at the convex edge. There is some retouch as well as splintered use-scars. Because the cortex is much softer than the flint, so it does splinter more easily. the right lateral edge has a notch(picture 3) and fine use-wear along the edge. Remarkable is the small(expecially in relation to the size of the blade) very well prepared platform remnant, see the last two pictures, Raw-material: brown flint with some spotted bright patination. ... moreAnd rests of matrix from the original site layer especially at the distal end, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available
Gorgeous Cone Flint Blade Core, Upper Paleolithic Europe Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Gorgeous Cone Flint Blade Core. Upper Paleolithic Europe Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: cone blade core. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: 7.0 cm x 5,0 cm x 6,2 cm, weight 180 grams, Shape. Retouch: a gorgeous cone blade core with one directional reduction face with the negative scars of several detached blades. The core has two other prepared faces(pictures 3 and 4. The latter shows upside down, and 5,6, the first with part of the underside/ platform) the underside/ platform is shown in the last picture. Flaking direction is shown, as some points of percussion, on the reduction face and underside respectively. Raw-material: dark brown flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary ... moreof the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Fantastic Multi - Notch / Denticulate, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Fantastic Multi- Notch/ Denticulate. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: multi– notch/ denticulate on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 7.0 cm, weight 34 grams, Shape. Retouch: a fantastic tool on elongated flat flake with cortical exterior side. Almost the entire contour of the flake is retouched by peeling off the cortex. There are two contiguous notches(picture 4) a nose– notch combination with large splintered use-scar(with retouch at it’s bottom end) See pictures 5, 6, a steep straight retouch(picture 7) and a large flat notch(picture 8) Raw-material: dark grey flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, ... morefirst excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Amazing Flint Saw / Serrated Tool, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Amazing Flint Saw/ Serrated Tool. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: saw/ serrated tool on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.5 cm, weight 30 grams, Shape. Retouch: an elongated triangular flake with cortex on half of the exterior side. The right lateral edge of the tool has a great finely serrated retouch. Remarkable is the the point of percussion/ bulb. Which is a promiment cone, Raw-material: brown flint with some spotted bright patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic ... moreartifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Gorgeous Large Flint Point, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Gorgeous Large Flint Point. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: laterally retouched point. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 8.2 cm, weight 58 grams, Shape. Retouch: this type of point was rather common at this site. Typically made on large pointed flakes, with fine retouch at the lateral edges. This one here has the fine retouch at both edges of the tip, but also has a splintered ue-scar on the interior side of the tip, and some fine retouch at the concave part of the right lateral edge, Raw-material: gray-brown flint with bright spotted patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated ... morein the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Awesome Neanderthal Pointed Flint Scraper Paleolithic Quina Mousterian 70.000 BC
Awesome Neanderthal Pointed Flint Scraper Paleolithic Quina Mousterian 70.000 BC Description Type: pointed convex scraper on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Palaeolithic(Palaeolithic) Quina Mousterian. Dating: approx. 75.000 to 65.000 B.C. Isotope stage 4, the first cold maximum of the last glaciation in Europe, where climatic conditions were harsh and extremely cold. Description: Size: length 5.7 cm, weight 32 grams, Shape. Retouch: an awesome slightly convex pointed scraper on flake. The scraper has a gorgeous. Partly stepped retouch, the very pointed tip included. Raw-material: marbled gray patinated flint, Preservation: very well: the scraper edge is flawless. Only the very thin proximal end has two or three tiny nicks, which in no way detract from value and beauty of this awesome tool. Additional Information. Literature: ... moreSome characteristics of the Quina Mousterian industry: only little Levallois technique was used. But Clacton flakes were preferred, no handaxes were found in the assemblages, a very high percentage of scrapers with lateral, double, convergent, transverse as most common ones, and sometimes small very thin scrapers with a very fine stepped retouch. Preferred retouch was the stepped/ or Quina retouch, made with hard strikes first which produced broad, irregular flake negatives and secondary refining retouches directly at the edges in a second step. Origin. Site: the famous(eponymous) site of La Quina. Charente, France, excavated by Dr. Henri-Martin from 1905 to 1936. A total of 27 Neanderthal individuals were found, the most famous is"Homo 5" We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirma
Wonderful Neanderthal Flint Point, Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian Europe
Wonderful Neanderthal Flint Point. Stone Age Paleolithic Mousterian Europe Description Type: laterally retouched point on flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Palaeolithic/ Mousterian. Dating: the particular site from approx. 130.000 B.C. stage 6 of the oxygen-isotope chronology up to approx. 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 4.8 cm, weight 18 grams, Shape. Retouch: a wonderful laterally retouched point which is difficult to classify: it could be a Levallois point with a plain platform remnant being a bit more oblique than usually found on Levallois flakes. Or it is a Clacton flake with a platform remnant which is not as oblique as usually found on this type of flake. Lateral retouch at both edges is fine. As typically found on Levallois points. Most significant is the retouch at the tip. Raw-material: marbled gray patinated flint, ... morePreservation: very well. No modern damages, Origin. Site: a famous Paleolithic site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne river. Dept. Dordogne, France, occupied by the Neanderthals. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Paleolithic Tool - Authentic Large Bifacial Flint Hand Ax - Museum Grade
Large Paleolithic Bifacial Flint Hand Ax Tool- Exceptional Museum Grade! This is a superb. Pear-shaped hand ax discovered at the base of a large cliff near an ancient campfire site. It was legally discovered near Green River, Wyoming. The cliff is large enough to have served as a make-shift"buffalo jump. Buffalo jumps were used by both roaming and indigenous peoples of the plains. The hunters would drive the buffalo skillfully down"lanes" which directed them to a high cliff(usually 35 ft or more) At a fully gallop the buffalo would fall from the weight of the heard pressing upon them. Breaking their bones and rendering them immobile. The buffalo carcasses were then processed at camps situated near the foot of these"jumps. These and similar sites were used throughout history at various locations around the world. The age ... moredating of the specimens are typically determined by the age of associated artifacts found in the area and. When possible, the determination of campfire charcoal dates. The age of this piece would suggest it is between 5.500 and 8,500 years old. It could be much older. Paleolithic means"old stone" and this hand ax tool is made from flint. The professionally trained eye can definitely verify that it is authentic. This scientific specimen comes with a COA from Jensan Scientifics. LLC. Collected by the company on expedition, in 2002. This is a one-of-a-kind specimen and tools this large are very rare. Size: 135mmL X 90mm W X 30mm D; Weight: 12.9 ounces or 365 grams 336.RcmdId ViewItemDescV4,RlogId p4%60bo7%60jtb9%3Fvo%7B%3Dd70f%2B%3E336-1457c874b5a-0x117-
Fabulous Saw / Serrated Flint Blade, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Fabulous Saw/ Serrated Flint Blade. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: saw/ serrated blade. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.5 cm, weight 19 grams, Shape. Retouch: a fabulous saw/ serrated blade. The left lateral edge of exterior and interior side both have a finely serrated retouch. Distal end is a blunted break. And, as it is very often the case, the corner break/ left edge of the interior side was used for working, see the splintered use-scars in picture 7. The proximal end is also a beak, the last mm with point of percussion must have broken off when detaching the blade from the core. The end got some fine retouch. Raw-material: bright gray– brown patinated flint Preservation: very well. No modern damages. ... moreOrigin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Wonderful Flint Endscraper, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Wonderful Flint Endscraper. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: endscraper on blade. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 6.9 cm, weight 28 grams, Shape. Retouch: we have been lisitng two very different endscrapers this week: this one here is made on a very wide. Thin, short blade. Retouch at the distal end is flat, except the continuous edge-refining which is steep. The tool has a small nose at each edge, just below the retouch of the endscraper. Especially the right one has a fine retouch at it’s edges and tip and might have been used as borer. Both lateral edges of the tool also present a fine retouch. Raw-material: brown flint, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley ... moreof a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Gorgeous Flint Blade with Endscrapers, Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Gorgeous Flint Blade with Endscrapers. Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: blade with endscrapers. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 7.4 cm, weight 13 grams, Shape. Retouch: a gorgeous long. Even, slender blade with cortical and blunted(picture 9) back at the left. Distal end is thick at the left and very thin at the right, so the left part got a significant retouch, the right part has very fine slintered use scars(pictures 3, 4) The proximal end with platform and point of percussion is reworked as endscraper, has a deep notch below and fine nibbling at the left lateral edge(pictures 5 to 8) Raw-material: brown flint with some spotted bright patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a ... moresite in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first excavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Fantastic Flint Endscraper, Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC
Fantastic Flint Endscraper. Stone Age Upper Paleolithic Aurignacian 35.000 BC Description Type: endscraper on first order ridge-blade. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Upper Paleolithic/ Palaeolithic: Aurignacian. Dating: approx. 38.000 to 28.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 5.8 cm, weight 30 grams, Shape. Retouch: we have been listing two very different endscrapers this week: this is a fantastic endscraper on distal part of a sturdy first order ridge-blade(see picture 6 in particular) The endscraper has a converging retouch and much secondary edge modification. Proximal end is a genuine old break. Reworked with some broad flaking, Raw-material: bright brown flint with some spotted bright patination, Preservation: very well. No modern damages. Origin. Site: a site in the valley of a tributary of the Dordogne. Department Dordogne, France, first ... moreexcavated in the beginning of 20th century. Main layer was Aurignacian. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
Museum Quality Neanderthal Convex Quina Scraper Paleolithic Mousterian 70.000 BC
Museum Quality Neanderthal Convex Quina Scraper Paleolithic Mousterian 70.000 BC Description Type: convex backed Quina scraper on on Clacton flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Paleolithic: Quina Mousterian. Dating: approx. 75.000 to 65.000 B.C. Isotope stage 4, the first cold maximum of the last glaciation in Europe, where climatic conditions were harsh and extremely cold. Description: Size: length 5.5 cm, weight 40 grams, Shape. Retouch: this is definitely a museum quality tool. Not only with respect to the quality of retouch, but also due to flint quality, which is excellent, very rarely found at La Quina. Flint from this site usually is soft and porous because of desilification after deposition. This scraper here is made on a Clacton flake with small cortical platform remnant. The tool is wedge-shaped, with thick, partly cortical ... moreback with some additional man-made backing. Distal end also is cortical. The scraper edge has an excellent stepped Quina retouch from tip(also retouched, see picture 7) to proximal end(picture 8) Raw-material: marbled dark grey patinated flint, Preservation: very well: one tiny flat recent chip on the interior side. Proximal part of the working edge, which is barely visible and in no way detracts from value and beauty of this amazing tool! Additional Information. Literature: Some characteristics of the Quina Mousterian industry: only little Levallois technique was used. But Clacton flakes were preferred, no handaxes were found in the assemblages, a very high percentage of scrapers with lateral, double, convergent, transverse as most common ones, and sometimes small very thin scrapers with a very fine stepped retouch. Preferred retouch was the stepped/ or Quina retouch, made with hard strikes first which produced broad, irregular flake negatives and secondary refining retouches directly at the edges in a second step. Origin. Site: the famous(eponymous) site of La Quina. Charente, France, excavated by Dr. Henri-Martin from 1905 to 1936. A total of 27 Neanderthal indiv
Fabulous Neanderthal Chalcedony Borer / Knife, Paleolithic Mousterian 50.000 BC
Fabulous Neanderthal Chalcedony Borer/ Knife. Paleolithic Mousterian 50.000 BC Description Type: borer/ Knife on Clacton flake. Paleolithic Period. Industry: Middle Palaeolithic: Mousterian. Late Mousterian. Dating: ca. 55.000 to 40.000 B.C. Description: Size: length 7.5 cm, weight 28 grams, Shape. Retouch: an elongated. Blade-like Clacton flake with interior platform angle greater than 105 degrees and large plain platform remnant. The left lateral edge has a retouched awl/ borer, retouch is continued below the awl. The right lateral edge is thin and sharp and must have been used for cutting, it presents fine splintered use-scars. Distal end is a naturally snapped edge which happened when detaching the flake from the core, Raw-material: creamy white patinated chalcedony, Preservation: very well no modern damages, Origin. Site: a large Neanderthal ... moreworkshop site at a chalcedony raw-material deposit in southern France. We have been listing more interesting paleolithic artifacts. Please have a look! Do you have questions? Don’t you find what you look for among our offers? Do you look for something particular, special or exceptional? Please send an email! Shipping costs: we ship internationally(worldwide) Buyer pays actual shipping charges. No handling fee. Shipping costs worldwide for registered air-mail(with tracking number and signature confirmation) is $ 8.00(500 grams box) Registered shipping within Germany is Euro 4,25. We combine items to save on shipping costs! Details will be settled with the buyer individually. About us: we are no traders. But we are selling only out of the own old collection. We guarantee for authenticity of our artifacts. On request we inform high bidders about provenance of the artifacts and we provide additional site information and dating(if available) taken from scientific literature.
12000Y.O: BORER BURIN STONE AGE UPPER PALEOLITHIC MAGDALENIAN FLINT C EUROPEAN
EUROPEAN STONE AGE ARTIFACTS BY PALATINA AUTHENTICITY GUARANTEED Description European Palaeolithic Magdalenian Culture. Dating around 12000 BP. This terrific flint tool is 39 mms long. Wonderful marble-like flint silex with fossil includings! Late Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherer communities occupying much of northern and western Europe during the period 16000–10000 bc. The classic Magdalenian is concentrated in southern France and northern Spain. But it can also be recognized extending northwards into Britain and eastwards into the North European Plain in Germany, Poland, and as far as the Sudost River in Russia. The name is taken from the type-site rock-shelter of La Madeleine in the Dordogne Valley of southwest France. The Magdalenian stone industry is characterized by small geometrically shaped implements, especially triangles and semilunar ... moreblades, that were probably set into bone or antler handles for use, burins, scrapers, borers, backed bladelets, and shouldered and leaf-shaped projectile points. Bone was used extensively to make wedges, adzes, hammers, spear heads with link shafts, barbed points and harpoons, eyed needles, and jewellery. Their economy was based on reindeer hunting and fishing, and there is evidence of occupied caves as well as open sites. Some of the finest cave art in France and northern Spain can be attributed to these communities, as can a great many decorated bone and ivory pieces. The Magdalenian followed the Solutrean and Aurignacian and was succeeded by the simplified Azilian. Magdalenian culture disappeared as the cool. Near-glacial climate of the late Devensian Stage warmed and the animal herds the communities depended upon became scarce. Provenance is an old German collection. More details will follow the artifacts. I guarantee absolutely for the authenticity of this wonderful Middle European artifact. Please view also my other auctions with relics from the European Prehistory. Powered by The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items. Rcmd
13000Y.O: ARROW SPEAR HEAD PALEOLITHIC STONE AGE COPY? FLINT REINDEER HUNTERS
NORTHERN EUROPEAN STONE AGE ARTIFACTS BY PALATINA AUTHENTICITY GUARANTEED Description It should be a" Slight Bromme Arrow Head" That occurs in the late Paleolithic( Palaeolithic) Bromme Culture 11400-10200 bc. One of the earliest and oldest Northern European flint artifacts! Length of this flint weapon is 75 mms. The Bromme culture is a late Upper Paleolithic culture dated to the Allerød Oscillation. A warmer spell between the Elder Dryas and the Younger Dryas, the last cold periods of the late Weichsel Glaciation. At this time, the reindeer was the most important prey, but the Bromme people also hunted moose, wolverine and beaver. The landscape was consequently a combination of taiga and tundra. The culture is named after a settlement at Bromme on western Zealand, and it is known from several settlements in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein. ... moreIn Sweden, it is known from the country's earliest known settlement at Segebro, near Malmö. It is charactherized by sturdy lithic flakes that were used for all tools, primarily awls(sticklar) scrapers and skaftunge arrow heads. No stone axes have been found. The Bromme culture and the Ahrensburg culture are so similar that they it has been proposed that the two cultures should be combined as one and the same under the label Lyngby culture, with the Bromme culture being recognized as an older northern branch of the same culture as the Ahrensburg culture. The slender tanged arrow heads are made from a pointed narrow blade of flake and having a secondarily flaked tang. Though often this is not much narrower than the rest of the head. Usually the blade is not trimmed. Though there may be a little chipping on one side. Occurs at the Bromme sites. Where there were all kinds of intermediate forms between it and the Lyngby arrows. Provenance is an old collection. More details will follow the artifact. I guarentee absolutely for the authenticity of this artifact from the Hunter Gatherer Stone Age. Please view also my other auctions with relics from the European P