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Acheulean Flint Handaxe

Lower Paleolithic (approx. 400,000 years ago), Swanscombe, Kent, United Kingdom

Session begins in

July 14, 02:00 PM GMT

Estimate

7,000 - 10,000 USD

Bid

100 USD

Lot Details

Description

Acheulean Flint Handaxe

Produced by Homo heidelbergensis

Lower Paleolithic (approx. 400,000 years ago)

Swanscombe, Kent, United Kingdom


4⅛ x 3⅛ x 1⅛ inches (10.4 x 8.0 x 2.8 cm), 4⅞ inches (12.4 cm) on stand.


A finely worked Acheulean flint handaxe of broadly ovate form, bifacially knapped and preserving a distinctive grey-green patina across its surface. Edges are well-defined and form is balanced, with careful shaping evident on both sides. The surface retains characteristic mineral deposits, giving the piece a softly mottled appearance.

With United Kingdom Export License (PAU/20008383/26)

A STUNNING AND WELL-PRESERVED HANDAXE FROM ONE OF BRITAIN'S MOST IMPORTANT PALEOLITHIC SITES


Acheulean handaxes are among the most characteristic artifacts of the Lower Paleolithic, produced over hundreds of thousands of years by early human species such as Homo erectus and Homo heidelbergensis. Carefully shaped by removing flakes around the core of a stone, they represent a revolutionary advance in both technical ability and cognitive planning.


Acheulean handaxes were the first stone tools to be worked symmetrically on both sides, and would have been used for cutting, hunting, butchering, and digging in soil. The shaping of two-sided handaxes – also known as bifaces – through the process of knapping (removing flakes around a stone core) is a complex skill that archaeologists have attributed to an increase in prefrontal brain activity and a high degree of working memory, both vital to the development of modern human cognition.


The present example is notable both for its provenance and its unusual coloration. Recovered from Swanscombe, one of the most important Lower Paleolithic sites in Britain, the area is closely associated with early human occupation and has yielded some of the most significant finds related to Homo heidelbergensis in northwestern Europe. Artifacts recovered from Swanscombe are widely regarded as key material in the study of early human activity in Britain. In addition, this handaxe is distinguished by its handsome grey-green patina, the result of long burial within mineral-rich soil deposits.