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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/21090
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Title: | Amphibolite; tools, slabs and outcrops. A preliminary study of provenances using Micro-X ray Diffraction |
Authors: | Moita, Patrícia Mirão, José Prazeres, Cátia Boaventura, Rui |
Keywords: | amphibolite axes and adzes micro-XRD provenences |
Issue Date: | 2015 |
Citation: | Moita P, Mirão J, Prazeres C, Boaventura R (2015). Amphibolite; tools, slabs and outcrops. A preliminary study of provenances using micro-X ray diffraction. Book of Abstracts, P1-167. |
Abstract: | During the Neolithic period amphibolite is a raw material that seems to have been highly regarded for its hard and durable qualities, and used in the production of ground stone tools
[1]. Less noticeable has been the use of amphibolite as building material, namely slabs as
described in [2]. In fact, this type of rock outcrop is less abundant than e.g. a granite and does
not allow the extraction of blocks large enough to be used as anchors of medium and big size
dolmens. Rabuje 5 (R5) is a small dolmen dated to the middle-second half of the 4th
millennium BCE [3], located in Monforte, (Portugal). This tomb is of particular interest to be
used as a case study since it was built solely with slabs of amphibolite, and within only
amphibolite ground stone tools were found.
This study aims to compare, through μXRD, the provenance of amphibolite artefacts and
slabs from R5 with those of outcrops located at a distance less than 1000 meters. In this sense
three ground stone tools (two axes and one adze), two sampled slabs, and one outcrop sample
were analysed. μXRD is a powerful non-destructive technique that allows the identification of
crystalline phases of a rock/artefact. Because amphibolite is a very strong anisotropic
lithology (minerals are aligned defining a lineation) it were performed analyses with the
samples with several orientation that nevertheless gave similar results.
The μXRD results (Fig.1), suggests a different provenance for axe and slabs. The mineralogy
of the slab matches the mineralogy of the nearby outcrop (namely hornblende and albite),
whereas the axe diffractogram does not exhibit hornblende but actinolite. In a preliminary
conclusion the slabs come from the studied and nearby outcrop; similar mineralogical
composition, and compatible dimensions, however axe was produced from different
source/outcrop. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/21090 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | GEO - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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