Early Bronze Age Stone Tools and Agricultural Innovations

Comparing Canaanean Blades from Tell ʿAtij in Northern Mesopotamia and Ein Zippori in the Levant

Authors

  • Jacques Chabot Laval University
  • Richard W. Yerkes Ohio State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jma.33428

Keywords:

Canaanean blades, Bronze Age, Levant, lithic technology, Mesopotamia, microwear analysis, threshing sledge

Abstract

The intensification of agricultural production in the Fertile Cresent during the Early Bronze Age (EBA) is reflected in two farming tools: Canaanean blades, which were thinner than Neolithic blades; and the threshing sledge, into which some of these blades were inserted. In northern Mesopotamia, most Canaanean blades were long and wide, made by pressure using a lever and copper point, although some were narrower and produced by indirect percussion or by pressure with a crutch. In the Levant, however, although some wide examples have been recovered, narrow forms predominated. Controlled experiments have revealed that microwear on blade segments used in sledge inserts is different from microwear on segments used as sickles. This paper analyses samples of Canaanean blades and blade segments from Tell ʿAtij in northern Mesopotamia and Ein Zippori in the Levant to examine (1) whether wider and narrower Canaanean blade segments were used for different tasks, (2) whether some Canaanean blade segments were designed specifically to be inserted into sickle handles and used for harvesting and (3) whether sickle inserts were recycled and used in threshing sledges. We also discuss how production and use of Canaanean blades is related to EBA agricultural intensification.

Author Biographies

  • Jacques Chabot, Laval University

    Jacques Chabot is Professor of Archaeology at Laval University (Québec city, Canada) and director of the ‘Laboratoire de recherche sur la pierre taillée’. One of his main projects over the past 20 years concerns the understanding of the production of long and regular blades in the Middle East, southern Caucasus and eastern Europe and the origins of agricultural activities. He specializes in both technological and use-wear analyses (high-power microwear) of lithic material.

  • Richard W. Yerkes, Ohio State University

    Richard W. Yerkes is Professor of Anthropology at Ohio State University, and Research Associate at the Field Museum, Chicago. His studies of agricultural practices and the emergence of hereditary inequality in ancient Mediterranean, southeastern European and North American societies have been published in leading peer-reviewed journals and books, and employ methods of anthropological ecology, lithic artifact analyses, microwear analysis and related theoretical frameworks.

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Published

2025-05-19

How to Cite

Chabot, J., & Yerkes, R. W. (2025). Early Bronze Age Stone Tools and Agricultural Innovations: Comparing Canaanean Blades from Tell ʿAtij in Northern Mesopotamia and Ein Zippori in the Levant. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. https://doi.org/10.1558/jma.33428