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Haifa archaeologists look to crack mysterious 6,500-year-old 'Triangle Code'
Times of Israel ^
| January 31, 2019
| Amanda Borschel-Dan
Posted on 08/02/2022 3:48:31 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
...A couple of years ago while hunched over her microscope at the University of Haifa, graduate student Rikva Chasan began to notice on the inside rims of countless stone bowls a plethora of previously undocumented, methodically incised small triangles.
Chasan is working as part of a multi-year international interdisciplinary project conducted by the university’s laboratory for ground stone tools research that is tracking the provenance of these basalt vessels across the ancient Levant in order to show socioeconomic changes in the Chalcolithic period, circa 4,500 BCE – 3,900 BCE...
Chasan postulates that the clearly coordinated decorations depict the start of a crafts specialization that crossed regional zones. This is a show of interesting broad-strokes cultural cooperation during what is considered a smaller, more "chieftain-level of society," she said, in which the people were early farmers and herders...
Chasan, who grew up in New Jersey and moved to Israel 3.5 years ago for graduate school, studied the 6,500-year-old basalt stone vessels for her masters thesis. As she compared examples from different sites, she realized that regardless of where they were found in prehistoric Israel, the uniformly decorated bowls were incised with small downward-pointing triangles.
Beginning in the 1930s, previous researchers had noted decorations on the basalt vessels, found at hundreds of sites in the ancient Levant — Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. But not the shape of them...
Unlike their flint counterparts, the basalt vessels were not made at homesteads, but in central places of manufacture. The vessels were then transported to settlements, said Rosenberg, based on a paucity of production debris at dwellings' excavations.
In Israel, the black-colored stone is found mostly in the Jezreel Valley, the Golan and the Galilee.
(Excerpt) Read more at timesofisrael.com ...
TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: chalcolithic; diaperpails; godsgravesglyphs; history; jezreelvalley; stonebowls; triangles
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1
posted on
08/02/2022 3:48:31 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...
Diaper pails?
2
posted on
08/02/2022 3:49:58 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
3
posted on
08/02/2022 3:53:35 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
To: SunkenCiv
“Don’t forget to drink your Ovaltine” WHAT A GYP!
To: SunkenCiv
on the inside rims of countless stone bowls Countless?
5
posted on
08/02/2022 3:56:27 PM PDT
by
humblegunner
(Ain't drownin', Just wavin'...)
To: humblegunner
Countless? For a male archeologist, more than 21...
6
posted on
08/02/2022 4:01:56 PM PDT
by
null and void
(they promise the jetsons but deliver the flintstones)
To: SunkenCiv
At first I thought why couldn’t it just be decoration but as the article pointed out these people were not just sitting around on the internet, “For me they had to have represented something. It’s not like now where people are wasting time on nothing. There was no Facebook, they weren’t in front of the computer all day. These were busy people doing agriculture. It has to say something to the people there.”
But not knowing much about basalt it is a rock, right? So did they have to hollow out these vessels and shape them out of rock? If so that’s incredible in it’s own right.
7
posted on
08/02/2022 4:08:50 PM PDT
by
Beowulf9
To: SunkenCiv
I apologize in advance...
Basalt, probably a washing ‘machine.”. Wouldn’t put wine in there.
Yes, I read the whole article. My bad.
I’m not an archeologist, but I did stay at a Holiday inn one time.
I must confess, my masters thesis was the French revolution and Marie Antoinette’s Chasity belt.
5.56mm
8
posted on
08/02/2022 4:09:28 PM PDT
by
M Kehoe
(Quid Pro Joe and the Ho got to go.)
To: SunkenCiv
Chasan Chasing Chalcolithic Chalices Cannot Count Countless Triangles.
9
posted on
08/02/2022 4:11:31 PM PDT
by
ProtectOurFreedom
(“May your neighbors respect you, trouble neglect you, angels protect you and heaven accept you”)
To: Beowulf9
But not knowing much about basalt it is a rock, right? So did they have to hollow out these vessels and shape them out of rock? If so that’s incredible in it’s own right.
—
Incredible using stone, and copper yes. Especially in some sort of factory line. Like some Old Kingdom carved heads that are from a type of granite which are accurate to the 1/16” and mirror imaged.
10
posted on
08/02/2022 4:21:10 PM PDT
by
PIF
(They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
To: SunkenCiv
Maybe they should just come to grips with the notion that is merely decoration rather than a code.
11
posted on
08/02/2022 4:46:25 PM PDT
by
GingisK
To: Beowulf9; M Kehoe; PIF
Sounds like a manufacturing system, products of a single shop, analogous to the 2nd c AD Samian ware from southern Gaul.
12
posted on
08/02/2022 4:51:45 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
To: ProtectOurFreedom
13
posted on
08/02/2022 4:52:00 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
To: SunkenCiv
Maybe expansion joints. Or they limit cracking for easy repair.
14
posted on
08/02/2022 5:03:01 PM PDT
by
Born in 1950
(Anti left, nothing else.)
To: M Kehoe
On behalf of the thread and Sunken Civ lets here about your thesis subject!
To: SunkenCiv; little jeremiah
'Through residue analysis, there was a clear use for the vessels and they were not just for display, said Chasan.""Unlike their flint counterparts, the basalt vessels were not made at homesteads, but in central places of manufacture. The vessels were then transported to settlements, said Rosenberg, based on a paucity of production debris at dwellings’ excavations."
S.C. My Thoughts:
1) When handling an object it is helpful to have something that assist in your grip. I suspect the cross hatch provided hands a surface that helps in maintaining a persons grip. It functions like cross hatch on a piston handle.
2 If they had a machine or machines that allowed them to partially hollow out the vessels which would explain the "Factory". Takes some time to fabricate that machine and they might try to keep it "Secret" so that other manufacturers would duplicate the factory and compete with them.
Here is a much later ancient india lathe for soapstone columns and pillars.
Hoysaleswara Temple Famous Lathe Pillar. (10th century AD)
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
17
posted on
08/02/2022 6:31:50 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
To: SunkenCiv
Without handling the objects its hard to be sure regarding the grip. The pottery is in pieces and stuck to a form on another continent and in any case no, they would not allow me near or take it out of the display case to try.
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Okay.
It’s quite boring.
I’ll cut to the conclusion...
When the maker of the Chasity belt presented to the king, he gave him the gold key, but he had secretly made another.
The maker gave the other key to the Duke of Kent. They did the horizontal bop. King Louie found out about the affair and cut off her head.
That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
5.56mm
19
posted on
08/03/2022 8:13:19 AM PDT
by
M Kehoe
(Quid Pro Joe and the Ho got to go.)
To: SunkenCiv
Did you see my post 19?
5.56mm
20
posted on
08/03/2022 4:01:13 PM PDT
by
M Kehoe
(Quid Pro Joe and the Ho got to go.)
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