Product Description
SEE MORE PREHISTORIC ATERIAN TOOLS
The Aterian Tool Industry is part of the Middle Stone Age of Africa. It is famous for what is considered to be the "FIRST" tanged arrowheads in the timeline of human stone tool development - the Aterian tanged point. The Aterian tanged point represents an important milestone in human thought and development. The Aterian tool industry was also responsible for creating non-tanged projectile points using the Levallois flaking technique. These points are known as Levallois Points and do not feature a tang. They are similar to the Middle Paleolithic Levallois points known in Europe, made by Neanderthals. Aterian tools were believed to be made by Archaic humans at a time when Neanderthals were thriving in Europe.
This remarkable specimen is an Aterian Levallois point made of rare petrified wood. It was surface-collected on an exposed site in the Northwest Sahara Desert, and dates to the African Middle Stone Age. This INVESTMENT-CLASS example is impossible to improve on as it was the absolute best of its kind in a 22 year dealer private collection! This supreme specimen is complete with superb preservation, heavy 'Desert Varnish' patina, and was made of RARE petrified wood (as opposed to flint or chert). This Aterian point shows AMAZING WOOD GRAIN PATTERNS that have patinated to a VIBRANT bright burnt orange, making the grain easy to see. It most certainly was prized by its Archaic human maker as much as it would be by a present-day advanced collector! Prehistoric flake tools like this one, of unique and purposeful aesthetic, demonstrate that primitive humans valued art as much as we do today! The majority of Aterian points discovered are incomplete, broken and/or of much worse condition than this fine specimen. It features a deep patina called 'desert varnish' which is a smooth, glossy surface layer consisting of iron oxide and manganese deposited over thousands of years by exposure to blowing desert sand.
Coming from our personal private Aterian tool collection that we had built over 22 years of extensive international travel, this is THE BEST OF THE BEST of the entire collection we are starting to offer. Over the years, we had been setting aside the absolute finest examples of Aterian tools that we opted to keep aside. Today, you just do not find specimens like this and we enjoyed the collection but now, it is now time to let someone else be their proud steward. This collection fills just one large Riker box display flat so once they are gone, these will be gone forever. Don't miss this fantastic opportunity to add some of the finest Aterian Middle Stone Age tools of Africa you will ever see on the market!
HISTORY
The Aterian Industry is a Middle Stone Age (or Middle Paleolithic) stone tool industry centered in the Tamazgha, but also possibly found in Oman and the Thar Desert. The earliest Aterian dates to c. 150,000 years ago, at the site of Ifri n'Ammar in Morocco however, most of the early dates cluster around the beginning of the Last Interglacial, around 130,000 years ago, when the environment of North Africa began to ameliorate. The Aterian disappeared around 20,000 years ago and it is currently not thought to have influenced subsequent archaeological cultures in the region.
The Aterian is primarily distinguished through the presence of tanged tools and is named after the type site of Bir el Ater, south of Annaba. Bifacially-worked, leaf-shaped tools are also a common artifact type in Aterian assemblages, and so are scrapers as well as Levallois flakes and cores. Items of personal adornment (pierced and ochred Nassarius shell beads) are known from at least one Aterian site, with an age of 82,000 years. The Aterian is one of the oldest examples of regional technological diversification, evidencing significant differentiation to older stone tool industries in the area, frequently described as Mousterian.
Usually, Aterian tanged points display very crude geometry with many barely resembling the arrowhead form that would later follow with refinement. A number of other flake tools with tangs, are found in the Aterian tradition that were scrapers hafted to wood, bone or ivory handles. The Aterian Tool Tradition is the first obvious evidence of a flake tool specifically designed for hafting. The Aterian Tradition also includes non-tanged flake tools but the tanged point is the most notable and a profound development from other Levallois flake tools of the period.