Aportación al conocimiento del Eneolítico-Bronce: un hacha pulimentada procedente de Cortos (Soria)
Keywords:
hacha de piedra pulimentada, Eneolítico-Bronce, polished stone axe, Eneolithic- Bonze AgeAbstract
Con este estudio queremos dar a conocer un hallazgo arqueológico aparecido hace ya bastantes años, pero que aún permanecía inédito. Sólo una pequeña nota publicada por F. Morales en la Carta Arqueológica de Soria “La Altiplanicie Soriana” era toda la referencia que se tenía sobre la pieza. Se trata de un hacha pulimentada procedente de la localidad de Cortos (Soria), a pie de la Sierra del Almuerzo, y que se puede encuadrar cronológicamente en el Eneolítico-Bronce.
In this work we present an archaeological find discovered many years ago but still not properly documented. The only reference to this piece comes from a short note published by F. Morales in the book “Carta Arqueológica de Soria: La Altiplanicie Soriana”. This piece is a polished stone axe found in Cortos (Soria), under Sierra del Almuerzo, that can be dated on the Eneolithic of the Bronze Age.
Downloads
Downloads
Issue
Section
License
The articles are open access distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) Spain 4.0 license. Authors who publish in this journal agree with the following terms:
a) Authors retain the copyright and guarantee the journal the right to be the first publication of the work as well as licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with a recognition of the authorship of the work and the Initial publication in this magazine.
b) Authors may separately establish additional agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in the journal (for example, place it in an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with recognition of its initial publication in this magazine.
c) Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work electronically (for example, in institutional repositories or on their own website) before and during the submission process, as it may result in productive exchanges, as well as a earliest and largest citation of published works (See The Effect of Open Access).