How to find out about the human mind through stone
"To hit the core on the same spot, a knapper, whether left-handed or right-handed, has to turn it to position it on one side of him or on the other. The angle at which the blow is made with both the right-handed and the left-handed percussor would be the same, but in exactly the opposite direction," said the researcher, who went on to say: "The core is the fragment of raw material from which the flakes are removed, and the percussion platform, the surface on which the core is struck".
One flint flake, one knapper
The first pieces of work oriented towards determining human laterality through flint flakes -the product of the flint knapping of our ancestors- were made by Toth in 1985. According to this researcher, while the flint flakes were being removed, a right-handed knapper would turn the core in a clockwise direction, while a left-handed one would do so in the opposite, anti-clockwise direction. However, subsequent pieces of research (Patterson and Sollberg) showed that a left-handed knapper could produce a certain number of right-handed flakes, and vice versa.
Later, Rugg and Mullane studied the orientation of the percussion cone of the flint flake and linked it with the direction of the percussion angle; yet Bargalló and Mosquera showed that the Rugg and Mullane method alone does not allow the knapper's laterality to be determined. In the end, Domínguez-Ballesteros and Álvaro Arrizabalaga came up with a method allowing each individual flint flake to be linked to the laterality of the knapper who produced it, without any need to have available a number of flakes produced by the same knapper. So it is an extensive method that can be applied across various periods of the archaeological record.
The study has been published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports.
Source: University of the Basque Country [September 23, 2015]
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