Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford, 36 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX2 PG1, United Kingdom.
J Hum Evol. 2013 May;64(5):457-65. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2013.01.015. Epub 2013 Mar 9.
Recent re-examination of the osseous material assemblage from Andernach-Martinsberg, Central Rhineland, has resulted in the identification of an implement manufactured from cetacean bone (probably whale). Argued to be the proximal half of a foreshaft, this artefact is not only one of few such projectile elements to be identified in Magdalenian deposits in northern Europe, but also demonstrates that the exploitation of marine raw materials for use in manufacturing projectile elements is not restricted to southern France, instead extending to at least inland Germany. Additionally, in conjunction with the appearance of marine molluscs and engravings of seals at Andernach, it can now be forcefully argued that this region formed part of an inland-coastal network during the Late Magdalenian and allows us for the first time to suggest that we can identify the movements of individuals transporting valued marine sourced raw materials and their personal experiences across this vast region.
最近对莱茵兰中部安德纳赫-马丁斯堡的骨骼材料组合进行了重新研究,从中鉴定出一种由鲸骨(可能是鲸鱼)制成的工具。该工具被认为是矛头的近端半部分,不仅是在北欧马格德林文化沉积物中发现的为数不多的此类投射物元素之一,还表明,利用海洋原材料制造投射物元素不仅限于法国南部,而是至少延伸到德国内陆。此外,结合安德纳赫发现的海洋软体动物和海豹雕刻,现在可以强有力地证明,该地区在马格德林晚期是内陆-沿海网络的一部分,这使我们第一次能够提出这样的观点,即我们可以识别出那些运输有价值的海洋原材料的个人以及他们在这个广阔地区的个人经历的流动。