Showing posts with label grinding stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grinding stone. Show all posts

Thursday

Manos, the Evolution of a Form

Evidence of the past surrounds us, at times visible but sometimes not.  Spending a good deal of time outside on the landscape provides an opportunity to observe evidence of past inhabitants especially in areas where there is little ground cover and in areas where the topsoil was removed through erosion.  Below is a photograph of mano and mano fragments from the area.  Complete and partial manos are frequent finds and always out number metates or metate fragments found.  Multiple manos of varying coarseness in association with single metates were documented from Mimbes sites, allowing the production of increasing finer meal from plant materials, which may explain the frequency of these finds.  While locations were recorded, these grinding tools were generally isolated and sitting on the eroded ground surface or small washes.  This sample of 23 manos display a variety of shapes and varying amounts of production processing.  These characteristics may be used to grade this sample from simple to complex (in terms of work required to produce the final product) without knowing the specific time period each mano was produced.

On the left are 3 examples of narrow unmodified stones with evidence of wear on one narrow surface.  These conveniently shaped stones are not local and are the simplest in the series.  Using a narrow edge for grinding was not an efficient method for processing plant material and these were the only examples found.  Since a mano and metate are multifunctional tools, these manos may represent tools for grinding other materials or are early . This is followed by a number of hand sized unmodified river cobbles with a generally rounded shape that show evidence of wear on a single surface. Again, no processing to create a tool is evident only a conveniently shaped rock was chosen for use.

The mono forms continue as round in shape but evidence of modification is observed around the edges where the stone was pecked producing a more rounded and useable form.  These manos also often are bifacial with wear on both surfaces and vary in size allowing single hand or 2 hand use.  The next change noted is an elongation of the mano.  This transition, while still maintaining rounded corners, manos became longer and larger suggesting 2 handed use.  Increased modification of the original stone is evident.  These larger loaf shaped manos would, with a large grinding surface areas, allow more plant material to be processed and therefore appear more efficient.  Interestingly one of the loaf shaped manos displays a directionality of use. The upper surface of one side is angled allowing easier handling while grinding.  The next form of mano is a highly processed stone that is uniform in thickness with bifacial wear.  These thin leaf like bifacial manos would require a significant amount of work to produce.  Finally, fragments of elongated tubular shaped manos were found.  Only 2 examples of these were found and represent the largest amount of production processing observed in mano.

The wide range of shapes and sizes suggest the idea that form follows function 
was very flexible in the development of manos as grinding tools and that multiple forms were useful in grinding and may be grinding material specific.  In addition, these observations conflate complexity (increased production processing) with time (less complex = older, more complex = newer) and undoubtedly multiple forms co-existed in time.  The increased reliance on corn (a shift towards monoculture) as a food source as opposed to relying primarily on a variety native plant species would have driven some forms of manos toward a more efficient form, seen in the highly processed bifacial leaf and tubular manos.  But at other times a simple rounded rock would do.

prehistoric stone tools
Mano and mano fragments of varying complexity




Monday

Artifact Garden at the Painted Pony Resort

In the back courtyard of the guest house at the Painted Pony Resort is a stone garden.  Though it is not your average stone garden with tastefully arranged rive rock suitable for meditation, rather the stone garden is composed of fragments from over 2 dozen metates and grinding stones.  There are also manos, hammer stones, scrapers, and other other artifacts collected off the property included in the stone artifact garden.  Started by guests of the former owner the tradition has continued and fragments of metates are added to the garden as they are discovered by guests or while working on the property.

Artifact Garden in the Guest House Courtyard at PPR.


Tuesday

Just Another Metate at the Painted Pony Resort

During the LSAM biologists visit I spent some time collecting with them. While walking the property, I noticed this double sided type 1 metate partially uncovered in a drainage near the south end of the runway. It was almost completely buried but the rounded end gave it away. It makes the third double sided metate I have seen from around here, the other 2 were found at Amigos del Cielo airpark. It is old, notice the thin layer of secondarily deposited mineral coating on one side. It suggests a long period of exposure to water with high concentrations of minerals. But really, it's just another coffee grinder.





Here is a single sided type 1 metate found a couple of months ago down by the entrance to the Painted Pony Resort.