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Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences

Abstract

Twenty-nine Neolithic polished stone axes from various archaeological sites in Eastern Thrace and İstanbul were analyzedin this study using petrographic and geochemical methods to identify their lithologies and locate their source rocks. We found thatvariable rock types, including diabase, siltstone, lava, granite, and serpentinite, were used to produce these stone tools in workshops.The same techniques were applied to samples of potential source rocks from a large area in NW Türkiye to determine the locations ofthe source rocks used to produce the stone axes. Diabase dykes of Şarköy ophiolite were identified as the source rock for the diabasepolished stone axes, the Upper Cretaceous basaltic/andesitic lavas of İğneada and dykes cutting the Paleozoic of İstanbul as the sourcefor the volcanic axes, and the Late Paleozoic granites in the Kırklareli region as the source rock for the polished granite stone axes. Twodifferent source rocks were used to produce the siltstone axes. One of these source rocks was Upper Cretaceous volcaniclastic sedimentfrom İğneada, but the second could not be identified. The polished stone axes, found in various settlements far from their source rocks,reveal the existence of a significant trade network in the Neolithic period. An excellent example is offered by the diabase axes found inthe settlements of Aşağı Pınar and Kanlıgeçit in Kırklareli and Hoca Çeşme in Enez/Edirne, which are >100 km and 70 km away fromthe known workshops of Şarköy, respectively. Siltstone tools were also distributed throughout the settlements. The granite and lava axeswere made from nearby sources, indicating a more localized trade network.

Author ORCID Identifier

TİMUR USTAÖMER: 0000-0002-1094-2937

ZEYNEP ÖZBEY: 0000-0001-7225-5502

M. NAMIK YALÇIN: 0000-0002-4542-1218

MEHMET CELAL ÖZDOĞAN: 0000-0002-7738-1767

EYLEM ÖZDOĞAN: 0000-0003-1314-3695

İSMAİL OZAN ÇILGIN: 0009-0005-1638-7371

ABDÜSSAMED GÜVEN: 0009-0004-5243-8810

DOI

10.55730/1300-0985.1960

Keywords

Polished stone axe, neolithic, petrography, geochemistry, Thrace, Türkiye

First Page

299

Last Page

326

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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