Materials in movement: gold and stone in process in the Upton Lovell G2a burial

Excavated over two centuries ago, the Upton Lovell G2a ‘Wessex Culture’ burial has held a prominent place in research on Bronze Age Britain. In particular, was it the grave of a ‘shaman’ or a metalworker? We take a new approach to the grave goods, employing microwear analysis and scanning electron m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Antiquity 2023-02, Vol.97 (391), p.86-103
Hauptverfasser: Crellin, Rachel J., Tsoraki, Christina, Standish, Christopher D., Pearce, Richard B., Barton, Huw, Morriss, Sarah, Harris, Oliver J.T.
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container_end_page 103
container_issue 391
container_start_page 86
container_title Antiquity
container_volume 97
creator Crellin, Rachel J.
Tsoraki, Christina
Standish, Christopher D.
Pearce, Richard B.
Barton, Huw
Morriss, Sarah
Harris, Oliver J.T.
description Excavated over two centuries ago, the Upton Lovell G2a ‘Wessex Culture’ burial has held a prominent place in research on Bronze Age Britain. In particular, was it the grave of a ‘shaman’ or a metalworker? We take a new approach to the grave goods, employing microwear analysis and scanning electron microscopy to map a history of interactions between people and materials, identifying evidence for the presence of Bronze Age gold on five artefacts, four for the first time. Advancing a new materialist approach, we identify a goldworking toolkit, linking gold, stone and copper objects within a chaîne opératoire, concluding that modern categorisations of these materials miss much of their complexity.
doi_str_mv 10.15184/aqy.2022.162
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects Alloys
Analysis
Anthropological research
Archaeology
Bronze Age
Burial
Burials
Cemeteries
Excavation
Funerals
Gold
Grave goods
Graves
Historic artifacts
Materialism
Stone
title Materials in movement: gold and stone in process in the Upton Lovell G2a burial
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