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Flint hammerstone discovered in Dukhan
Lower Paleolithic
Object Name: Hammer
Period: Lower Paleolithic
Provenance: Qatar
Dimensions: 5,3x3,7x4,7 cm
Medium: flintstone
Registration Number: ARC.1960.9.380
Place Of Discovery/Findspot:  Plateau south east of Dukhan
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This small round hammer is made of flint. It feautures traces of natural cracks on all its faces. Due to its size, it seems to have been used for fine secondary retouching or to chip other tools. A hammer stone is the archaeological term for one of the oldest and simplest stone tools ever made by man: a rock used as a prehistoric hammer to create percussive fractures in another rock. It comes from the south of the Dukhan plateau and was discovered during a survey carried out by the Danish expedition in 1960.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT QATAR
Palaeolithic Period: 300,000–8000 BCE

The Palaeolithic period has generally not been well documented on the western shores of the Gulf. This is because most remains have been submerged under the waters of the Arabian Gulf due to geological conditions. Before 14,000 BCE the land was dry, after which the sea level began to rise and gradually flood the land. This continued until about 7,500 BCE when the sea stopped rising and the shoreline was left as we know it today.

As part of the Tigris-Euphrates river system, the land that is now the Gulf was lush and green, offering its inhabitants the basic means for survival including plants to gather and animals to hunt. One of the earliest pieces of evidence of human activity which has been passed down to us is the lithic industry, where types of stone were worked through various techniques to create tools. These objects have been able to withstand the test of time mainly due to the hardness of their material.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT - REGION/GULF/WORLD
The Palaeolithic, or Old Stone Age, is one of the major periods of prehistory and is characterised by the appearance of the first human species. This period is also known as the ‘Carved Stone Age’, as humans used and worked stones to create tools. The first basic tools were simple cutting, chopping and grinding tools, later evolving into more and more complex forms that were increasingly difficult to make. This period is divided chronologically into three periods: the Lower, Middle and Upper Palaeolithic, the dates of which vary between continents and populations.
PUBLICATIONS AND RESEARCH
Kapel, Holger. 1967. Atlas of the Stone-Age Cultures of Qatar. VI. 152. fig,1. Scott-Jackson, J., et al. , 2014, "The stone age of Qatar: new investigations, new finds ; interim report. PSAS: 44, 317-324.
LOCATE ON QATAR MAP
Plateau south east of Dukhan