Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel

This paper sheds light on the presence and significance of unusually small, colorful, unmodified, flint pebbles unearthed at Qesem Cave, a late Lower Paleolithic site in Israel. For over two million years, early humans were noticing, collecting and bringing "home" various non-utilitarian...

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Main Author: Ella Assaf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2018-03-01
Series:Journal of Lithic Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/2616
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spelling doaj-6f725bc5d51b401f914e8fcdc1075eff2020-11-25T02:33:15ZengUniversity of EdinburghJournal of Lithic Studies2055-04722018-03-015110.2218/jls.2616Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, IsraelElla Assaf0Tel-Aviv University This paper sheds light on the presence and significance of unusually small, colorful, unmodified, flint pebbles unearthed at Qesem Cave, a late Lower Paleolithic site in Israel. For over two million years, early humans were noticing, collecting and bringing "home" various non-utilitarian objects with aesthetic visible characteristics, in what seems to reflect a basic human trait. Archaeological findings suggest that as early as the Lower Paleolithic, prehistoric humans were also guided by considerations other than economic, cost-benefit ones. Such is the case at Qesem Cave, where seventeen pebbles that are clearly smaller than the smallest pebbles used in the lithic industry on-site were found. These objects do not show any traces of use. Based on archaeological and anthropological evidence, I suggest that the small, natural flint pebbles exhibit noticeable visual characteristics, and therefore they might have been selected and brought to the cave due to their aesthetic traits. Various materials such as animal carcasses, fire-wood and lithic materials were systematically procured and brought to the cave, indicating that the inhabitants must have been well acquainted with different sources of resources. In this light, the presence of the pebbles seems to be the result of conscious, purposeful decisions. Their presence at the cave reveals a fraction of some of the aesthetic and perceptual preferences of the early humans that inhabited Qesem Cave, and their rich cultural world. http://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/2616Qesem Cave; Lower Paleolithic; flint pebbles; aesthetic perceptions; human evolutio
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ella Assaf
spellingShingle Ella Assaf
Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
Journal of Lithic Studies
Qesem Cave; Lower Paleolithic; flint pebbles; aesthetic perceptions; human evolutio
author_facet Ella Assaf
author_sort Ella Assaf
title Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
title_short Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
title_full Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
title_fullStr Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
title_full_unstemmed Paleolithic aesthetics: Collecting colorful flint pebbles at Middle Pleistocene Qesem Cave, Israel
title_sort paleolithic aesthetics: collecting colorful flint pebbles at middle pleistocene qesem cave, israel
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Journal of Lithic Studies
issn 2055-0472
publishDate 2018-03-01
description This paper sheds light on the presence and significance of unusually small, colorful, unmodified, flint pebbles unearthed at Qesem Cave, a late Lower Paleolithic site in Israel. For over two million years, early humans were noticing, collecting and bringing "home" various non-utilitarian objects with aesthetic visible characteristics, in what seems to reflect a basic human trait. Archaeological findings suggest that as early as the Lower Paleolithic, prehistoric humans were also guided by considerations other than economic, cost-benefit ones. Such is the case at Qesem Cave, where seventeen pebbles that are clearly smaller than the smallest pebbles used in the lithic industry on-site were found. These objects do not show any traces of use. Based on archaeological and anthropological evidence, I suggest that the small, natural flint pebbles exhibit noticeable visual characteristics, and therefore they might have been selected and brought to the cave due to their aesthetic traits. Various materials such as animal carcasses, fire-wood and lithic materials were systematically procured and brought to the cave, indicating that the inhabitants must have been well acquainted with different sources of resources. In this light, the presence of the pebbles seems to be the result of conscious, purposeful decisions. Their presence at the cave reveals a fraction of some of the aesthetic and perceptual preferences of the early humans that inhabited Qesem Cave, and their rich cultural world.
topic Qesem Cave; Lower Paleolithic; flint pebbles; aesthetic perceptions; human evolutio
url http://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/2616
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