Litcius/Paper detail

Flint ‘figurines’ from the Early Neolithic site of Kharaysin, Jordan

Juan José Ibáñez, Juan Muñiz, Thomas Huet, Jonathan Santana, Luis César Teira Mayolini, Ferrán Borrell, Rafael Rosillo, Eneko Iriarte

2020Antiquity16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During the Early Neolithic in the Near East, particularly from the mid ninth millennium cal BC onwards, human iconography became more widespread. Explanations for this development, however, remain elusive. This article presents a unique assemblage of flint artefacts from the Middle Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (eighth millennium BC) site of Kharaysin in Jordan. Contextual, morphological, statistical and use-wear analyses of these artefacts suggest that they are not tools but rather human figurines. Their close association with burial contexts suggests that they were manufactured and discarded during mortuary rituals and remembrance ceremonies that included the extraction, manipulation and redeposition of human remains.

Topics & Concepts

IconographyAssemblage (archaeology)NinthArchaeologyPotteryAncient historyMiddle EastGeographyPrehistoryHistoryAcousticsPhysicsArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology StudiesAncient Egypt and Archaeology