Early Neolithic or Late Mesolithic Stone Axe - Caspian Culture, North Africa (Tunisia/Algeria)
Early Neolithic or Late Mesolithic Stone Axe - Caspian Culture, North Africa (Tunisia/Algeria)
Early Neolithic or Late Mesolithic Stone Axe - Caspian Culture, North Africa (Tunisia/Algeria) 1
Early Neolithic or Late Mesolithic Stone Axe - Caspian Culture, North Africa (Tunisia/Algeria) 2

Early Neolithic or Late Mesolithic Stone Axe - Caspian Culture, North Africa (Tunisia/Algeria)

$245.00
The Capsian hunter-gatherer culture (c. 8,000–3,000 BC), existed in the early Holocene period (Post-Ice Age) throughout the Maghreb (Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco).
They were a microlithic (tiny-flaked-blade) tool complex, and this is a splendid stone tool, hand-knapped to function as a hand axe.
With a dark and smooth "desert varnish" surface from millennia of exposure to the elements and sand, the tool displays rich hues of honey and taupe.

The Acheulean stone tool tradition - named after the location in France where tools of this kind were first identified - represented a technological revolution. This blade was made to be used in a variety of tasks, such as cutting, digging, and scraping hides. It is always thrilling to hold such ancient artefacts and imagine our prehistoric ancestors using these tools!

Ex. Ambassador Allen Davis Collection, Virginia

Length is 6 ½" x 2 ½" wide x 1 ⅞" in depth

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