SEARCHING FOR THE GARAMANTIAN EMERALD: RECONSIDERING THE GREENCOLORED STONE BEADS TRADE IN THE ANCIENT SAHARA
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
In the current literature, Saharan green-colored stone beads are identified with the term ´emeraude garamantique, while
several archaeological investigations on Garamantian contexts referred to them as amazonite. Moreover, according to the
hypothesis proposed by Monod, authors identify the only source of amazonite to be the pegmatite swarm at Eghei Zuma
(northern Tibesti, Libya). To check this assumption, we characterized the composition of green-colored stone beads found at
Fewet, a Garamantian site (2nd century BC - 1st century AD) in the Libyan Sahara. We performed electron microprobe analyses
on stone beads from Fewet and ethnographic contexts of Mali, Mauritania, and Sudan. Furthermore, lacking a regional database
on amazonite to compare the geochemical properties of archaeological beads, we analyzed amazonite crystals from several
African pegmatites, including samples from Eghei Zuma. The results show that green-colored stone beads from Fewet consist
of serpentinite and amazonite. The K/Rb versus Rb diagram reveals that the source of the amazonite from Fewet could not be
the pegmatite at Eghei Zuma. The raw material for amazonite beads traded in Garamantian times originated from Egypt and
Mauritania. We discuss the archaeological implications of our results, which concerns the directions of ancient trade routes for
elite goods in Garamantian times.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
green-colored stone beads; Amazonite; Eghei Zuma; geochemical analysis; Garamantes; Saharan trade routes
Elenco autori:
Vignola, PIETRO ERNESTO
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