A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)

During a surface sampling of archaeological materials on a shellmidden in the Punta Medanosa locality, a fossil shark tooth clearly associated was recovered. The location of the shellmidden on a matrix of erosion dunes, seated on late Holocene cordons, allowed us to affirm that this finding correspo...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel, Castro, Alicia, Ambrústolo, Pablo, Contreras, Carolina
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/19436
Aporte de:
id I10-R372-article-19436
record_format ojs
spelling I10-R372-article-194362024-11-04T18:48:36Z A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz) Un diente de tiburón fósil usado como objeto adorno-colgante en la localidad Arqueológica Punta Medanosa (costa norte de Santa Cruz) Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel Castro, Alicia Ambrústolo, Pablo Contreras, Carolina “Isurus” hastalis ecofact shellmidden personal adornment “Isurus” hastalis ecofacto conchero objeto de adorno personal During a surface sampling of archaeological materials on a shellmidden in the Punta Medanosa locality, a fossil shark tooth clearly associated was recovered. The location of the shellmidden on a matrix of erosion dunes, seated on late Holocene cordons, allowed us to affirm that this finding corresponded to a ecofact or biofact, that is, a natural product transported to this site. Subsequently, by means of macro and microscope laboratory analysis work, it was found that it was a modified artefact by polishing and notching, which would have allowed its use as a pendant, probably as a corporal adornment. In this note, a description of the recovered piece is presented, as well as the studies carried out to support its allocation as a corporal adornment. Durante los trabajos de muestreo de materiales arqueológicos en superficie en un conchero de la localidad Punta Medanosa se recuperó un diente fósil de tiburón, claramente asociado contextualmente a dichos restos. La ubicación del conchero sobre una matriz de dunas en erosión, asentado sobre cordones litorales del Holoceno tardío, permitieron afirmar que el hallazgo correspondía a un ecofacto, es decir, un producto natural que fue transportado desde donde afloran los fósiles hasta el sitio. Mediante trabajos de laboratorio, a nivel macro y microscópico, se constató que el ejemplar correspondía a un artefacto modificado mediante técnicas de pulido, probablemente en el marco de la confección de un objeto colgante para uso como adorno corporal. En esta nota se presenta una descripción de la pieza recuperada, así como los estudios que sustentan la identificación de las modificaciones antrópicas que confirman su caracterización como objeto adorno-colgante.  Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología 2019-04-30 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer reviewed article Artículo revisado por pares Investigación básica Artigo revisado por pares application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/19436 10.31048/1852.4826.v12.n1.19436 Revista del Museo de Antropología; Vol. 12 No. 1 (2019); 95-100 Revista del Museo de Antropología; Vol. 12 Núm. 1 (2019); 95-100 Revista del Museo de Antropología; v. 12 n. 1 (2019); 95-100 1852-4826 1852-060X 10.31048/1852.4826.v12.n1 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/19436/23585 Derechos de autor 2019 Miguel Ángel Zubimendi, Alicia Castro, Pablo Ambrústolo, Carolina Contreras
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-372
container_title_str Revista del Museo de Antropología
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic “Isurus” hastalis
ecofact
shellmidden
personal adornment
“Isurus” hastalis
ecofacto
conchero
objeto de adorno personal
spellingShingle “Isurus” hastalis
ecofact
shellmidden
personal adornment
“Isurus” hastalis
ecofacto
conchero
objeto de adorno personal
Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel
Castro, Alicia
Ambrústolo, Pablo
Contreras, Carolina
A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
topic_facet “Isurus” hastalis
ecofact
shellmidden
personal adornment
“Isurus” hastalis
ecofacto
conchero
objeto de adorno personal
author Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel
Castro, Alicia
Ambrústolo, Pablo
Contreras, Carolina
author_facet Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel
Castro, Alicia
Ambrústolo, Pablo
Contreras, Carolina
author_sort Zubimendi, Miguel Ángel
title A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
title_short A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
title_full A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
title_fullStr A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
title_full_unstemmed A fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the Punta Medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of Santa Cruz)
title_sort fossil shark tooth used as a pendant at the punta medanosa archaeological locality (north coast of santa cruz)
description During a surface sampling of archaeological materials on a shellmidden in the Punta Medanosa locality, a fossil shark tooth clearly associated was recovered. The location of the shellmidden on a matrix of erosion dunes, seated on late Holocene cordons, allowed us to affirm that this finding corresponded to a ecofact or biofact, that is, a natural product transported to this site. Subsequently, by means of macro and microscope laboratory analysis work, it was found that it was a modified artefact by polishing and notching, which would have allowed its use as a pendant, probably as a corporal adornment. In this note, a description of the recovered piece is presented, as well as the studies carried out to support its allocation as a corporal adornment.
publisher Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología
publishDate 2019
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/19436
work_keys_str_mv AT zubimendimiguelangel afossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT castroalicia afossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT ambrustolopablo afossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT contrerascarolina afossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT zubimendimiguelangel undientedetiburonfosilusadocomoobjetoadornocolganteenlalocalidadarqueologicapuntamedanosacostanortedesantacruz
AT castroalicia undientedetiburonfosilusadocomoobjetoadornocolganteenlalocalidadarqueologicapuntamedanosacostanortedesantacruz
AT ambrustolopablo undientedetiburonfosilusadocomoobjetoadornocolganteenlalocalidadarqueologicapuntamedanosacostanortedesantacruz
AT contrerascarolina undientedetiburonfosilusadocomoobjetoadornocolganteenlalocalidadarqueologicapuntamedanosacostanortedesantacruz
AT zubimendimiguelangel fossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT castroalicia fossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT ambrustolopablo fossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
AT contrerascarolina fossilsharktoothusedasapendantatthepuntamedanosaarchaeologicallocalitynorthcoastofsantacruz
first_indexed 2024-09-03T20:01:23Z
last_indexed 2025-03-27T05:32:49Z
_version_ 1827724139266310144