SEVILLE, SPAIN—Carlos Odriozola of the University of Seville and his colleagues analyzed six beads recovered from prehistoric high-status graves—two found in a 5,000-year-old cave tomb known as La Molina in southern Spain, and four 4,000-year-old beads recovered from a burial in Cova del Gegant, which is located near Spain’s northeastern coast. Cosmos reports that the beads all appeared to be carved from amber, but none of them were actually made of the prized ancient tree sap. The beads from Cova del Gegant were made of pine resin layered over mollusk shell, while the beads from La Molina were made of tree resin layered over seeds. Their reddish color may have resulted from exposure to cinnabar, another prized material, Odriozola explained. He and his colleagues speculate that real amber beads may have been difficult to acquire, even for high-status individuals such as those buried in these two tombs, or these individuals may not have been as wealthy as once thought, and settled for lower cost, look-alike jewelry. A third possibility, according to the researchers, is that the fake amber beads were peddled by unscrupulous traders. Chemical analysis of other supposedly ancient amber artifacts could reveal additional counterfeits, they said. To read about another recent discovery in Iberia, go to "Spain's Silver Boom."
Analysis Reveals Imitation Amber in Prehistoric Graves
News May 1, 2019
Recommended Articles
Artifacts July/August 2019
Bronze Age Beads
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2024
A Nightcap for the Ages
Artifacts March/April 2024
Mesolithic Baskets
Features March/April 2024
Freedom Fort
In eighteenth-century Spanish Florida, a militia composed of formerly enslaved Africans fought for their liberty
-
Features March/April 2019
Sicily's Lost Theater
Archaeologists resume the search for the home of drama in a majestic Greek sanctuary
(Giuseppe Cavaleri) -
Letter From Texas March/April 2019
On the Range
Excavations at a ranch in the southern High Plains show how generations of people adapted to an iconic Western landscape
(Eric A. Powell) -
Artifacts March/April 2019
Medieval Seal Stamp
(Rikke Caroline Olsen/The National Museum of Denmark) -
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2019
Fairfield's Rebirth in 3-D
(Virginia Department of Historic Resources)