Product Description
ID
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Mousterian Levallois Point
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FOUND
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Indre-et_Loire - West Central France
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AGE
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MOUSTERIAN: 80,000 - 40,000 years
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SIZE
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2.85" long
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CONDITION
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INTACT AND COMPLETE.
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NOTE
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FINEST MADE EXAMPLE WITH NOTCH
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INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX - Actual Item - One Only
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This is probably the finest, most impressive and beautiful Mousterian Levallois Point / Spearhead we have ever offered in memory. It is a rare Neanderthal artifact - much more so than hand axes from the same period. This Mousterian Point was fashioned of stunning warm gold flint known from the Indre-et-Loire region from which it was originally collected.
The concept of a "projectile point" was FIRST KNOWN in human history during the Middle Paleolithic Period, whereas, hand axes had been around for over one million years by that same time. This might explain the sheer scarcity of fine grade point specimens. The Mousterian Point or Levallois Point would be humanity's first spearhead. Lashed to a wooden pole, it would have gave rise to the invention of a new weapon for hunting large game. Now, the megafauna of the day such as mammoths, bison, rhino, and horse, could be hunted with greater success. Such a weapon would have also given prehistoric humans a more effective weapon against each other.
This robust example was made on a Levallois point, retouched for perfect form, tapering to the base, and then struck on the base to remove a partial flake leaving a protruding "notch" on one side allowing a perfect hafting point to be lashed to a wooden pole. The tip in intact as made. The edges show evidence of use and re-use from re-sharpening by its former Neanderthal owner. Surface shows prehistoric patina and mineral deposits still embedded in the hinge fractures - irrefutable evidence of an authentic specimen. A rare, rare invention of Neanderthal intelligence improving a new design. In perfect, AS MADE condition. NO RESTORATION, REPAIR OR MODERN DAMAGE.
This Mousterian point / spearhead was made by Neanderthals over 40,000 years ago and was discovered in France. France is home to some of Europe's most spectacular Paleolithic sites nearly all of which have long been closed and off-limits to any collecting, which makes this scarce prehistoric weapon a highly desirable acquisition piece for the best collections or investment! This Mousterian Point came from a very old French collection as is the case with all the best material being stashed for decades and decades in private collections of yesteryear when collecting was possible. Today, sites are depleted, closed and protected, preventing further digging of any new artifacts.
Mousterian Points are theorized to have been used as spearheads mounted on the ends of wooden poles and employed to stab large prey by Neanderthal hunters. Certainly a specimen like this would have been a formidable weapon and such a size would have been needed to take down large prey such as Woolly Mammoth, Bison, Aurochs, Cave Bear and Woolly Rhinoceros. The form and execution of this extraordinary spearhead is superb. By this period in time, Man had not yet invented the bow and arrow but intact Neanderthal wooden spears have been scientifically documented in situ. Triangular pointed tips first made by Neanderthals were the precursor to the arrowhead!
The Levallois Technique is a method of flake tool manufacture that was first employed in the Acheulian Era about 250,000 years ago by archaic Homo sapiens but perfected in the Middle Paleolithic Era by Neanderthals. It consists of starting with a core of stone and using heavy percussion hammering on one side to remove large flakes in a radial fashion, creating a "turtle-back" profile on one side of the core. A single heavy blow at one end of the core struck the flake off and the end result was a prepared flake (a la Levallois) with a convex shape on one side (from initial flake removal when still attached to the core) and a flat side on the other (from the side split off the remaining core). Edges of this struck flake were then retouched to create the desired cutting edge but the geometry of the two sides remained. It was the Levallois method employed by Neanderthals to manufacture a variety of early tools including the first points that were hafted to wooden poles for use as spears. These were the first known human-made spears and were likely used by thrusting, rather than throwing.