Szczegóły publikacji

Opis bibliograficzny

Chert concretions and bedded cherts from the southeastern Franconian Alb, Bayerwald and Kraków-Czestochowa Upland as potential raw materials for artifact manufacturing in the Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic – a comparative petrographic study / Alicja KOCHMAN, Jacek MATYSZKIEWICZ // Geological Quarterly ; ISSN 1641-7291. — 2025 — vol. 69 no. 2 art. no. 12, s. 1-22. — Bibliogr. s. 19-22, Abstr. — Publikacja dostępna online od: 2025-06-16

Autorzy (2)

Słowa kluczowe

bedded chertsFranconian AlbBayerwaldKraków-Częstochowa Uplandchert concretionssiliceous artifacts

Dane bibliometryczne

ID BaDAP160519
Data dodania do BaDAP2025-06-24
Tekst źródłowyURL
DOI10.7306/gq.1785
Rok publikacji2025
Typ publikacjiartykuł w czasopiśmie
Otwarty dostęptak
Creative Commons
Czasopismo/seriaGeological Quarterly

Abstract

The Upper Jurassic carbonate deposits of microbial-sponge megafacies, which host chert concretions and bedded cherts, were deposited along the northern margin of the Tethyan Ocean. Exposures of these rocks extend from Portugal to the Caucasus Mts. Well-known localities include those in southeastern Germany and southern Poland, where these strata are similar in lithology. Petrographic studies on chert concretions and bedded cherts from Upper Jurassic successions exposed in the southeastern part of the Franconian Alb and in the Bayerwald have shown that silicification was a late-diagenetic, multistage process and that the silica presumably originated from hydrothermal solutions. The chert concretions of the Bayerwald show considerable similarity to lithologies known from the Kraków-Czestochowa Upland. In both regions, these mostly represent silicified microbial-sponge biostromes. By contrast, the chert concretions of the Franconian Alb, where younger parts of the Upper Jurassic succession are preserved, differ significantly from the concretions encountered in both the Bayerwald and the Kraków-Czestochowa Upland. The bedded cherts of the Franconian Alb are partly silicified tempestite sequences whereas those of the Kraków-Czestochowa Upland represent silicified calciturbidites. However, some fine-grained portions of these successions show macroscopic resemblance, despite their differences in development. In prehistoric times, these regions in Poland and Germany were sources of siliceous raw-materials, which might have been exported towards Bohemia, as suggested by artifacts that are believed to have originated from Poland or Germany. However, comparative studies indicate that macroscopic diagnostic features determining the origin of artifacts manufactured from either the chert concretions or the bedded cherts are of doubtful value. In particular, the “chocolate flint” distinguished by archaeologists, the origin of which is suggested to be limited exclusively to the northeastern margin of the Holy Cross Mts. or to the central part of the Kraków-Czestochowa Upland, may also represent parts of chert concretions collected in the Franconian Alb. Distinction of this variety in artifact inventories based upon individual specimens may be erroneous.

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Characterization and identification of siliceous rocks from the Kraków-Częstochowa Upland (Southern Poland) as potential raw materials / Alicja KOCHMAN // W: Lithic raw materials in prehistory : methods, practice and theory / eds. Michael Brandl, Maria Gurova ; Austrian Academy of Sciences. Austrian Archaeological Institute. Department of Prehistory & West Asian / Northeast African Archaeology. — Vienna : Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, cop. 2025. — (Oriental and European Archaeology ; ISSN 2415-1688 ; vol. 33). — ISBN: 978-3-7001-9489-7. — S. 41–53. — Bibliogr. s. 49–53, Abstr.
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#127629Data dodania: 18.2.2020
Siliceous rocks from the southern part of the Kraków-Częstochowa Upland (Southern Poland) as potential raw materials in the manufacture of stone tools – a characterization and possibilities of identification / Alicja KOCHMAN, Jacek MATYSZKIEWICZ, Michał Wasilewski // Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports ; ISSN 2352-4103. — 2020 — vol. 30 art. no. 102195, s. 1–13. — Bibliogr. s. 12–13, Abstr. — Publikacja dostępna online od: 2020-01-31