Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1035730 Journal of Archaeological Science 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Dental microwear features in a sample of 10 human teeth from Tell Ashara and Tell Masaikh, two archaeological sites in the Middle Euphrates valley, Syria, were compared for possible evidence of a shift in grinding technology in Mesopotamia—parallel to the well-documented introduction of large rotary querns and watermills in the Graeco-Roman world. Two chronological subsets (Bronze Age, n = 4 and Late Roman/Islamic period, n = 6) differred substantially and features related to a more abrasive diet (broad lines, pits and punctures visible on SE micrographs) were significantly less frequent in the later subsample which may indicate that the shift in cereal grinding technology occured in Mesopotamia before the Late Roman period.

► Cereal grinding technology changed during the Classical Antiquity. ► Archaeological sources were too scarce to document this change in Mesopotamia. ► Analysis of dental microwear patterns suggest that grinding technology changed in Mesopotamia too. ► Analysed sample is too chronologically dispersed to precisely date this event.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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