Obsidian in the Caribbean islands? Mysterious Ceramic Age glass artefacts in the Lesser Antilles

Author:

Leck Arthur12ORCID,Bellot‐Gurlet Ludovic3ORCID,Carazzo Guillaume4ORCID,Gratuze Bernard5,Langlade Jessica6,Le Bourdonnec François‐Xavier2ORCID,Leandri Céline78,Shearn Isaac9,Stouvenot Christian1011,Queffelec Alain1

Affiliation:

1. UMR5199 PACEA, CNRS Univ. Bordeaux, Ministère de la Culture Pessac France

2. UMR6034 Archéosciences Bordeaux, CNRS Univ. Bordeaux Montaigne Pessac France

3. UMR8233 MONARIS, CNRS Sorbonne Université Paris France

4. Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPGP), CNRS Univ. Paris Cité Paris France

5. UMR7065 IRAMAT‐CEB, CNRS Univ. d'Orléans Orléans France

6. UAR3113, CNRS Univ. Brest Plouzané France

7. SRA Corse Ministère de la Culture Ajaccio France

8. UMR5608 TRACES, CNRS, Ministère de la Culture Univ. Toulouse Toulouse France

9. Morgan State University Baltimore Maryland USA

10. SRA Guadeloupe Ministère de la Culture Baillif France

11. UMR8096 ARCHAM, CNRS Université Paris 1 Panthéon‐Sorbonne Paris France

Abstract

AbstractThe Caribbean islands witnessed a population expansion of ceramic‐using horticulturalists during the Early Ceramic Age (ca. 500 BC to 750 AD) from the Orinoco Valley to Puerto Rico. We examined 18 lithic artefacts from Guadeloupe and Dominica initially thought to be obsidian, a material believed to be absent from those islands. We investigated the volcanic or meteoritic origin of this unique and yet unknown material through observation (binocular, SEM, microtomography) and geochemical analyses (PIXE, SEM‐EDS, ED‐XRF, EPMA, LA‐ICP‐MS). Elemental analyses rule out the hypothesis of an origin from a meteoritic impact (i.e. identification as tektites). Most of the artefacts have an andesitic composition (<63% SiO2), which appears to be unique among ‘massive’ glasses. The only artefact with a rhyolitic composition has been traced back to the Guadeloupe's Volcan du Tuf, where glassy fragments have been collected and analysed. The geological source of the other vitreous artefacts that exhibit an andesitic composition could be from a sublocal subduction‐arc volcanism (maybe from Martinique), although no volcanic vitreous material of this kind has ever been reported worldwide. These results once again highlight the regional mobility of Early Ceramic populations and the production of standard lithic products using a highly original, albeit low‐quality, local lithic resource, and provide valuable references for future identification of similar materials.

Funder

Ministère de la Culture

Conseil Régional de Guadeloupe

Université de Bordeaux

Publisher

Wiley

Reference88 articles.

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2. A PIXE/Fission-Track Dating Approach to Sourcing Studies of Obsidian Artefacts in Colombia and Ecuador

3. Paris monograph in American archaeology 15;Bérard B.,2004

4. L'utilisation de la percussion sur enclume par les premières populations agro‐céramistes des Antilles;Bérard B.;PALEO: Revue d'Archéologie Préhistorique, 2009–2010 (spécial),2011

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