Procurement and Prestige: Patterns in the Provenience of Prehistoric Mediterranean Obsidian
Obsidian tools and flakes found at prehistoric sites in the eastern and central Mediterranean
are evidence of a complex series of activities including procurement and transport of the raw
material from island sources, production and distribution of cores or finished tools, and consumption
and eventual disposal. The chemical analysis of more than 1000 tools from sites in Italy and France
triples the provenience data available for reconstructing central Mediterranean "trade" and provides
a framework for interpreting the specific cultural context in which their acquisition was embedded.
Furthermore, the analysis of samples from each stratigraphic level of multi-component sites such
as Filiestru Cave in Sardinia and Basi in Corsica allows for temporal control from the Early
Neolithic through the Early Bronze Age. While differential use of the various obsidian sources has
been recognized in peninsular Italy, it is apparent now that distribution patterns vary both
geographically and chronologically, and in ways not explained by differences in accessibility or
functional suitability between sources. Several possible explanations are discussed, including
cultural alliances, the prestige factor in long-distance exchange networks, the role of middlemen and
craft specialization, and the coexistence of multiple modes of production and distribution. Finally,
the social and economic role of obsidian is compared with that of ceramics and other ground or
flaked stone materials, and the central Mediterranean data are contrasted with those from Greece and
the eastern Mediterranean.