Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology

Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the material culture assemblage of Arctic groups for thousands of years. The pre-Inuit population known as the Dorset cultures (app. 800 BC–1300 AD) - also sometimes referred to as Tuniit - were highly depe...

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Main Authors: Siebrecht, Matilda, Pomstra, Diederik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2
https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10534
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spelling ftunigroningenpu:oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2 2024-06-23T07:50:27+00:00 Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology Siebrecht, Matilda Pomstra, Diederik 2020 https://hdl.handle.net/11370/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2 https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2 https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10534 eng eng https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Siebrecht , M & Pomstra , D 2020 , ' Hunting for Use-wear : Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology ' , EXARC Journal , vol. 2020 , no. 4 . < https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10534 > article 2020 ftunigroningenpu 2024-06-10T17:01:53Z Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the material culture assemblage of Arctic groups for thousands of years. The pre-Inuit population known as the Dorset cultures (app. 800 BC–1300 AD) - also sometimes referred to as Tuniit - were highly dependent on a maritime subsistence with harpoon heads as one of the dominant artefact categories at Dorset sites. Although the use of these harpoons is known from historic ethnographic reports observing Inuit hunting techniques and comparison with modern harpoon styles, a preliminary study by Siebrecht suggests there is little evidence of this use found on the surface of archaeological harpoon heads in terms as microscopic use-wear. This contrasts with other studies investigating bone projectiles, which did identify traces of use after experimentation with replica objects. The present study therefore aims to investigate this disparity using several replica harpoon heads made of bone and antler to experimentally harpoon a seal carcass to determine the extent to which use-wear is formed when harpooning a marine mammal. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic inuit Tuniit University of Groningen research database Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Groningen research database
op_collection_id ftunigroningenpu
language English
description Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the material culture assemblage of Arctic groups for thousands of years. The pre-Inuit population known as the Dorset cultures (app. 800 BC–1300 AD) - also sometimes referred to as Tuniit - were highly dependent on a maritime subsistence with harpoon heads as one of the dominant artefact categories at Dorset sites. Although the use of these harpoons is known from historic ethnographic reports observing Inuit hunting techniques and comparison with modern harpoon styles, a preliminary study by Siebrecht suggests there is little evidence of this use found on the surface of archaeological harpoon heads in terms as microscopic use-wear. This contrasts with other studies investigating bone projectiles, which did identify traces of use after experimentation with replica objects. The present study therefore aims to investigate this disparity using several replica harpoon heads made of bone and antler to experimentally harpoon a seal carcass to determine the extent to which use-wear is formed when harpooning a marine mammal.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Siebrecht, Matilda
Pomstra, Diederik
spellingShingle Siebrecht, Matilda
Pomstra, Diederik
Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
author_facet Siebrecht, Matilda
Pomstra, Diederik
author_sort Siebrecht, Matilda
title Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
title_short Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
title_full Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
title_fullStr Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
title_full_unstemmed Hunting for Use-wear:Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
title_sort hunting for use-wear:investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the dorset cultures using experimental archaeology
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/11370/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2
https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10534
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
inuit
Tuniit
genre_facet Arctic
inuit
Tuniit
op_source Siebrecht , M & Pomstra , D 2020 , ' Hunting for Use-wear : Investigating use-wear traces on antler and bone harpoon heads from the Dorset cultures using experimental archaeology ' , EXARC Journal , vol. 2020 , no. 4 . < https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10534 >
op_relation https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/8f42984b-c470-4d59-8bde-c9b74f071fe2
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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