翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Greenspring, Baltimore
・ Greenspun
・ Greenspun Media Group
・ Greenspun's tenth rule
・ Greenstead Green
・ Greensted
・ Greensted Church
・ Greensted Green
・ Greensteds School
・ Greenstein
・ Greenstein (surname)
・ Greenstein Har-Gil, Landscape Architecture
・ Greenstick fracture
・ Greenstock
・ Greenstone
Greenstone (archaeology)
・ Greenstone (software)
・ Greenstone and Caples Tracks
・ Greenstone belt
・ Greenstone Building
・ Greenstone Hill
・ Greenstone Mountain Provincial Park
・ Greenstone Point
・ Greenstone Ridge Trail
・ Greenstone River
・ Greenstone TV
・ Greenstone, Ontario
・ Greenstown, West Virginia
・ Greenstream pipeline
・ GreenStreet


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Greenstone (archaeology) : ウィキペディア英語版
Greenstone (archaeology)

Greenstone is a common generic term for valuable, green-hued minerals and metamorphosed igneous rocks and stones which early cultures used in the fashioning of hardstone carvings such as jewelry, statuettes, ritual tools, and various other artefacts. Greenstone artefacts may be made of greenschist, chlorastrolite, serpentine, omphacite, chrysoprase, olivine, nephrite, chloromelanite among other green-hued minerals.〔See "Glossary" in Hendon & Joyce (2004, p.327); also Kipfer (2000, pp.217–218).〕 The term also includes jade and jadeite, although these are perhaps more frequently identified by these latter terms.〔Kipfer (2000, pp.217–218); Pool (2007, p.150)〕 The greenish hue of these rocks generally derives from the presence of minerals such as chlorite, hornblende, or epidote.〔Kipfer (2000, p.218)〕
Greenstone minerals were presumably selected for their color rather than their chemical composition. In archaeology therefore, having a loosely applied general term is at least partially influenced by the observation that ancient cultures often used and considered these various green-hued materials as interchangeable.〔Kipfer (2000, pp.217–218)〕 Greenstone objects are often found very considerable distances from the source of the rock, indicating early travel or trading networks. A polished jadeite axe head in the British Museum (4000-2000 BCE) was found in Canterbury, Kent but uses stone from the Alps of Northern Italy, and objects from other parts of the world had travelled comparable distances to their findspots.〔(British Museum ), "Axe" Acq. 1901,0206.1〕
Ancient China and Mesoamerica have especial reputations for the prevalence and significance of greenstone (particularly jade) usage. Greenstones also figure prominently in the indigenous cultures of southeastern Australia, and among the Māori of New Zealand (who knew greenstone as ''pounamu'').〔 Neolithic Europe also used greenstone, especially for prestige versions of axe tools, not made for use; comparable jade versions of tools and weapons also appeared in the Olmec and other Pre-Columbian cultures and in early Chinese civilization.
== Gallery of greenstone versions of tools or weapons ==

File:British Museum jadeite axe.jpg|Neolithic jadeite axe head, found in England but made from stone from the Italian Alps
File:WLA haa China Neolithic Ritual Blades Dao nephrite.jpg|Nephrite ritual blade from Neolithic China
Image:Tobago jade ceremonial ax.jpg|Greenstone ceremonial axe from Tobago


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Greenstone (archaeology)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.