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A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the

Egyptian Sahara
PER STOREMYR

Storemyr, P. 2014. A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara. AmS-Skrifter 24, 6782, Stavanger. ISSN 0800-
0816, ISSN 0800-0816, ISBN 978-82-7760-158-8
In 2007, the first reported grinding stone quarry in the interior of Egypts Western Desert was found by the north scarp of the
Kharga depression. It can be tentatively dated to Holocene prehistory, within the moist phase that lasted from ca. 8,500 to 5,300
BC, or slightly later. In this period, the climate was humid enough to support foraging and pastoralist cultures and thus grinding
stones were needed to process vegetable matter, perhaps also mineral pigments. The discovered quarry is small, yet thousands of
relatively standardised, flattish and oval, lower grinding stones were produced from the silicified sandstone, in particular with the
aid of flint hammerstones. Since the quarry is located beyond major Holocene prehistoric occupation sites, it is interpreted as having
been exploited in an organised way, by groups of people that regularly visited the place, and possibly also created rock art close by.

Per Storemyr, Archaeology & Conservation Services, Blumenstrasse 11, CH-5200 Brugg, Switzerland. Phone (+41) 76 3664701.
E-mail: per.storemyr@hotmail.com. Web: www.per-storemyr.net

Keywords: grinding stone quarry, silicified sandstone, Egypt, Kharga Oasis, Holocene prehistory

The discovery made. The most frequent stone encountered is silicified


Anyone who has been trekking in the Sahara has seen sandstone, which is a fairly abundant rock in Kharga
the large numbers of grinding stones strewn on the and the Western Desert.
desert floor at long-forgotten occupation sites (Fig. 1). With all these grinding stones scattered throughout
Most of them are remains from a specific time in history the area, the question arises: Where are the quarries?
the early to middle Holocene wet phase, between Were the grinders just procured in an ad hoc manner
roughly 8,500 and 5,300 BC (Kuper & Krpelin 2006; from the nearest patch of silicified sandstone, or rather
all dates in this paper are calibrated), when the Sahara as part of organised exploitation?
was green as a savannah and thus could sustain wide- Until recently, no one had an answer to these ques-
spread human occupation. The Kharga Oasis a huge tions. Not until Dirk Huyge and the present author,
depression, featuring the largest of the string of oases while participating in the American University in
in Egypts Western Desert also supported exten- Cairos 2007 North Kharga Oasis Survey (NKOS),
sive Holocene prehistoric occupation before the rains started following a string of very peculiar, crude flint
diminished and people withdrew to the Nile Valley, or hammerstones on a Pleistocene alluvial terrace towards
clustered around the little water left in the oasis, even the north scarp of the Kharga depression (Fig. 2 and 3).
until today. The hammerstones were clearly produced from pebbles
The grinding stones in Kharga and elsewhere in the and small boulders of poor, greenish flint that had
Western Desert (or more broadly the Eastern Sahara) been deposited on the terrace back in the Pleistocene.
normally consist of a big, flattish oval lower stone and a Associated with the hammerstones were often a few
small, roundish upper stone, which can be moved with inexplicable fragments of brown silicified sandstone;
one or two hands to grind seed and other vegetable obviously minor work of some kind had been going on.
matter, perhaps also mineral pigments. Of course, We followed the hammerstones up the terrace and,
there is quite some variation in typology, as well as at one point, Dirk wished to do something more in line
in the materials from which the grinding stones were with his interests, so he left to examine nearby rock art

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Per Storemyr

Fig. 1. Collection of
broken, oval lower
and roundish upper
grinding stones at
the early-middle
Holocene occupation
site by Umm
el-Dabadib in
Kharga. Scale is 15
cm long. Photo: Per
Storemyr.

Fig. 2. Heading along an alluvial terrace towards the north scarp of the Kharga depression: Dirk Huyge looking for artefacts. Photo:
Per Storemyr.

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AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Fig. 3. A depot of flint


hammerstones on the
alluvial terrace with
views south over the
Kharga depression.
Photo: Per Storemyr.

Fig. 4. The grinding stone quarry by the north scarp: a work area lined with broken slabs. Scale is 15 cm long. Photo: Per Storemyr.

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Per Storemyr

sites, leaving me to my exploration, the stone and quar- chronology of prehistoric archaeological sites, although
ries. I continued tracking the hammerstones, in the NKOS has been working to rectify this since 2000.
hope of finding a reason for their presence. After three The chronology of human occupation suggested by
kilometres, I found the explanation. As I looked up Caton-Thompson (1952), based on work in the 1930s, is
from a group of hammerstones, a plateau overlooking still in use and has generally been corroborated by later
the terrace caught my attention. I walked up and expeditions (see overview in Wiseman 1999). Due to
suddenly found myself in a wonderful grinding stone the arid conditions, there was hardly any human pres-
quarry (Fig. 4), full of blanks of oval lower grinders and ence in the later parts of the Pleistocene. However, with
fragments of the flint hammerstones. They had been the onset of sparse Holocene rains around 8,500 BC
used as tools to work the grinding stones! (Kuper & Krpelin 2006), occupation greatly intensi-
fied. Caton-Thompson (1952) divided the early-middle
Holocene at Kharga in the Bedouin Microlithic, roughly
corresponding to the Epipalaeolithic of the Nile Valley
Regional archaeological context (ca. 9,0005,000 BC), and the Peasant Neolithic, chron-
This grinding stone quarry is the first to be reported ologically matching the Neolithic (ca. 5,0004,000
from the interior of Egypts Western Desert, and there BC)/Predynastic (ca. 4,0003,000 BC) periods along
are probably several more awaiting discovery. This is the Nile. Later, the Kharga Oasis Prehistoric Project
because of the widespread use of grinders in occupa- introduced the roughly corresponding Midauwara and
tion sites on the vast floor of the Kharga depression, Baris cultural units in Kharga, which also correspond
which is about 180 km long, 5080 km wide, and situ- with the Masara and Bashendi units in the Dakhla
ated some 200 km west of the Nile Valley (Fig. 5 and Oasis (Kleindienst et al. 2002, 2009).
6). The occupation sites are usually related to playa and Generally, for the southern Western Desert and
spring mound deposits, several of which have been corresponding areas bordering the Nile in Upper
investigated by the few expeditions that have worked Egypt and Lower Nubia, there is hardly evidence
here since the beginning of the 20th century. However, of a Neolithic economy in the terms known from
as compared to the Dakhla Oasis immediately to the the Fertile Crescent. Rather, in the early to middle
west, Kharga has been relatively poorly investigated Holocene, the region was characterised by highly
with regard to characterisation, distribution and mobile peoples roaming the vast terrain following the
seasonality of the sparse rains, occupying favourable
niches, such as playa environments, for shorter and
longer periods. Though highly disputed, cattle domes-
tication may have started already in the 8th millennium
BC (Nabta Playa); widespread herding of sheep and
goat was certainly introduced by ca. 6,000 BC. Thus,
throughout the early and middle Holocene hunting
was still a dominant activity. Likewise, there was
no farming, but systematic gathering of wild plants
(tubers, fruits, grass seeds), which implies that we
are probably not looking at use of grinding stones for
domesticated grain before the 5th millennium BC, or
even later. Cultivation or trade in cereals can perhaps
be associated with the emerging complex societies
in the Nile Valley. Thus, in general terms, the region
supported foraging peoples that became combined
pastoralists and foragers over the millennia after ca.
6,000 BC. As the climate deteriorated from ca. 5,000
BC, people migrated to the few oases with permanent
ground water supply, but mainly to the Nile Valley
Fig. 5. Location of the Kharga oasis and the grinding stone
quarry (arrow). Map of Egypt modified from Wikimedia (see, for example, Wendorf & Schild 2001, Riemer
Commons (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Egypt_ 2008, Gatto 2011, Briois et al. 2012).
Topography.png).

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AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Fig. 6. Satellite image showing important places mentioned in the text. This is a strongly tilted view, looking east, the scale only
applicable to areas in the lower part of the image. Long arrow indicates the location of a main desert route, the Darb Ain Amur.
Image modified from Google Earth.

From ca. 3,000 BC, at the beginning of the Pharaonic Niger/South Algeria (Hugot 1968:484, Milburn 1983),
period, Kharga got a position as an outpost of the the Lake Chad region (Connah 1981:2555, Connah &
new state and for long-distance desert travel, as well Jemkur 1982:41, Garba 1997:39), Ghana (Ratz & Flight
as for mineral exploitation (in particular for alum, see 1974) and Darfur in the Sudan (Haaland 1995:164166).
Lucas & Harris 1962:257259, Shortland et al. 2006).
The oasis still held this position 3,000 years later and
by then it formed part of the southern Roman fron-
tier, still highly visible in the form of a very impressive
Local context: environment,
string of fortresses in the northern part of the oasis. archaeology and geology
Today, Kharga features a bustling little town at the The grinding stone quarry was found and surveyed (but
centre of the depression and is easily reached by high- not excavated) upon exploration of the northern part
ways connecting to the Nile Valley and the other oases of the Kharga depression, about 40 km northwest of
in the Western Desert. present-day Kharga town (Fig. 68). This area, dubbed
Though the grinding stone quarry described in this Split Rock (Fig. 9) by NKOS, is located 18 km west
paper is the first one reported from Kharga and the of a major Holocene prehistoric site and the Roman
Western Desert, it is not entirely isolated in terms of fortress at Umm el-Dabadib. It is also along a major
similar, prehistoric and later quarries in this part of ancient desert route, called Darb Ain Amur, heading
Egypt. Large flint quarries are known at the Refuf pass due west to Dakhla Oasis (e.g. Beadnell 1909, Ikram
(Fig. 6) at the eastern scarp of the Kharga depression & Rossi 2006). Situated by the foothills of the scarp,
(Caton-Thompson 1952:187194). In nearby regions, Split Rock lies in a landscape of low sandstone hills at
massive grinding stone production is known in Aswan, the edge of lower-lying land with Pleistocene-Holocene
from the Late Palaeolithic through the Roman period playa deposits.
(Roubet 1989, Bloxam et al. 2007). Small-scale produc- Some archaeological features by Split Rock have
tion is also known 400500 km farther north, in the probably been washed away by Holocene flash floods,
Faiyum (Heldal et al. 2009). Moreover, from other but the area still features camps and water depots of
parts of the Sahara and Sub-Saharan Africa there are Roman and later dates, as well as numerous rock art
reports of quern factories and grinding stone quarries panels discovered by NKOS, dating from the early-
dating to various periods, some of which continued middle Holocene to the Islamic period (Ikram 2009).
to be used until the present. Examples include sites in Also, there are some stone circles that may represent

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Per Storemyr

Fig. 7. Simplified geological map of the Kharga depression. In


the environs of the grinding stone quarry, which is located in the
upper part of the Taref formation, the geology is as follows:
Qd=Sand dunes
Q=Quaternary deposits
Te=Tertiary (Eocene) limestone, often with flint nodules and
layers
Tp=Tertiary (Paleocene), including the Kurkur and Garra
formations (reef-like, hard thick-bedded and massive white
limestone, sandy in part and with intercalations of shale, often
with flint nodules and layers)
Kn=Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian-Turonian), including the
Maghrabi and Taref formations (sandstone, siltstone, shale)
Ku= Mainly late Cretaceous (Campanian-Paleocene), including
the Quseir, Duwi and Dakhla formations (sandstone, siltstone,
claystone, phosphate beds and conglomerate)
J=Jurassic marine sediments
Modified map from the Egyptian Geological Survey and Mining
Authorities (1981), descriptions from Hermina (1990).

the remains of (prehistoric?) huts or tents. A landmark


of a mountain, conical in form with a flat peak, over-
looks the site at the northern scarp.
One kilometre to the northwest of Split Rock is a
low valley with extensive Pleistocene alluvial deposits,
forming terraces, partially downcut by Holocene flash
floods. They are gently sloping within the sandstone
area, from higher limestone terrain at the northern
scarp, and representing earlier drainage from the basins
to the north of the Kharga depression. It was on one of
Fig. 8. Map of the environs of the grinding stone quarry. North
these terraces (Fig. 2) that we found dozens of scattered
is up. Map: Per Storemyr.
workings of small blocks of silicified sandstone associ-
ated with hammerstones and debitage of flint, as well as Geologically, the Kharga grinding stone quarries are
small depots of hammerstones. Three kilometres to the situated within the upper portion of the Taref forma-
north, we find the largest quarry, on a small sandstone tion of the late Cretaceous (Turonian, ca. 90 mya) (Fig.
plateau on the eastern fringe of the valley (Quarry 1). 7) (on the geology of Kharga, see Ball 1900, Beadnell
In addition to this quarry and the workings along the 1909, Hermina 1990). This formation is part of what
terrace, there are at least three other, smaller quarries has been traditionally called Nubian Sandstone, a
(Quarry 24) in the vicinity (Fig. 8). unit of mainly continental sandstones within a more

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AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Fig. 9. Split
Rock an
area of ancient
campsites and
rock art along
a major desert
route (Darb Ain
Amur) about
three km south of
the grinding stone
quarry. Photo:
Per Storemyr.

extensive sequence of Cambrian to late Cretaceous


sandstone, siltstone, marls and sporadically limestone,
which is widespread in North Africa, Arabia and parts
of the Near East. Its sandstone members have been of
great importance as ancient building stone, especially
in Upper Egypt (e.g. Harrell & Storemyr 2009). Thinner
and thicker, ferruginous and silicified, hard hori-
zons are common in the Nubian sandstone and were
exploited for tools throughout the Stone Age. Likewise,
such horizons were much sought after for procurement
of grinding stone and, in Ancient Egypt, ornamental
stone of various kinds, particularly from the extensive
quarries at Aswan (cf. Heldal & Storemyr 2007, Heldal
2009).
More specifically, the upper part of the Taref forma-
tion is interpreted by Hermina (1990) as consisting of
cross-bedded beach dune deposits, with occasional
interbeds of clay and shale. Field observations and
examinations of samples with a hand lens indicate
that the exploited deposits consist of medium-grained,
very quartz-rich sandstone of whitish to brownish and
reddish colours, the latter a result of the presence of
oxidised iron compounds. Typically, relatively resistant,
silicified layers are presently forming the top of plateaus
and small hills, often in the form of a layer of broken-
up blocks and slabs. However, contrary to many other Fig. 10. Sketch map of Quarry 1. Long arrows indicate
areas with similar sandstone in the region, silicification (previous) water drainage. Map: Per Storemyr.

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Per Storemyr

Fig. 11. Quarry 1,


located on the little
hill/plateau in the
middle, upper part
of the picture, as seen
from broken-up slabs
and blocks in Quarry
2. View towards the
south. Photo: Per
Storemyr.

has not been particularly invasive; it seems very patchy Table 1. Dimensions of a selection of oval rough-outs from
and has not contributed to complete filling of the pores Quarry 1.
of the originally rather friable and porous sandstone.
Stone no. Max. length, Max. Max. Comment
Thus, a main reason for using this sandstone must have interpreted width thickness
been that it very easily splits into slabs. (cm) (cm) (cm)

As for the flint hammerstones, they are derived from 1 >30 23 4 Broken
the Tertiary limestones on top and to the north of the 2 >34 30 5.5 Broken
Kharga north scarp. Hard, silicified cobbles of lime- 3 35 25 6.5 Partially
stone, common on the alluvial terraces in the area, broken
are also derived from these limestones (cf. Hermina 4 35 ca. 27 5.5 Partially
broken
1990).
5 ca. 39 30 ca. 5 Broken
6 >27 23.5 ca. 5 Broken
7 >30 33 ca. 6.5 Broken
The quarries 8 >27 28 ca. 7 Broken

The largest quarry is about 65 m long and 30 m wide, 9 38 28 >4 Broken


totalling slightly more than 2,000 m2 (Fig. 4 and 10 >30 34 9 Broken
1011). Before quarrying began, the plateau must have Mean >32.5 ca. 28 ca. 5.8
featured cracked blocks and thick slabs, which easily
split into thinner slabs along the bedding plane of the On closer inspection, many shallow, circular depres-
rock a natural feature that was taken advantage of in sions, with a diameter of roughly 12 m, lined with
the quarrying process. There are few larger blocks left, slabs and coarse stone fragments were observed (Fig.
as practically all have been exploited, implying that the 4). These are interpreted as work areas. There is very
quarry plateau is a jumble of thousands of broken slabs little fine debitage since, after loosening the slabs
and discarded grinding stone roughouts. One gets the from larger blocks, it was only necessary to trim them
impression that a group of larger blocks at the southern along the edges in order to produce the desired lower
edge of the quarry, overlooking the alluvial terraces in grinding stone roughouts. The quarry is littered with
the valley, were deliberately left. This is because the such discarded, oval roughouts that broke perpen-
blocks are visible from below and could have been used dicular to the long axis during the production process.
as a marker of the quarry. Measurement and interpretation of a selection of 10,

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AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Quarry 2 is located on a slightly more elevated


plateau, about 150 m north of Quarry 1 (Fig. 8 and
11). It is smaller than Quarry 1 (roughly 20 m x 20 m),
but displays the same general characteristics, except
that there are several remaining blocks that have not
been completely exploited. Moreover, at least six flint
hammerstones with a diameter of 814 cm were found.
Some of the remaining blocks display a few marks of
hammering on the top, indicating that this was one
of the methods applied for loosening slabs from the
blocks.
Quarry 3 is rather an exploratory project than a true
quarry. It is located on another small plateau 120 m to
the north of Quarry 2 and features slightly different
sandstone than in the two former quarries. The stone
is reddish-brown, rather compact, but less silicified and
less prone to splitting along the bedding plane than the
others. One flint hammerstone was found, but gener-
ally this site has produced only few grinding stone
roughouts.
Fig. 12. Artefacts in the grinding stone quarries. A) and The same can be said of Quarry 4, which is located at
B) Broken lower grinding stone rough-outs. These are the the head of the low valley, about one km to the north of
most common artefacts in the quarries, C) Rare example of Quarry 3. The sandstone is slightly harder, but other-
elongated, oval rough-out, D) Handstone, E) Photo indicating
thickness (ca. 10 cm) of a lower grinding stone rough-out, F)
wise similar to that found in Quarry 3. No tools were
Flint hammerstones in the quarries. Small scale is 15 cm long, found here, and no clear grinding stone roughouts,
folding carpenters ruler 50 cm in each direction. Photos: Per but quite a lot of smaller, broken sandstone blocks,
Storemyr. probably indicating that this was a place for procuring
handstones.
mainly broken roughouts (Table 1) indicates that the There are several other areas with silicified sand-
grinding stones were rather standardised, with an stone along the valley, especially at the western flank,
average length of more than 33 cm (probably in the but none of them seem to feature ancient quarries.
order of 4050 cm), an average width of slightly less The sandstone is generally hard, has very dark desert
than 30 cm and an average thickness of about 6 cm. varnish, breaks up in slabs and seems suitable for
In addition to these oval, flat roughouts, two thicker, grinding stone procurement. There might be reasons,
longish oval forms (ca. 35 cm x 18 cm) were found. unknown to us, other than stone quality as to why
Moreover, one small, flat circular stone and an egg- these resources were not put in use.
shaped stone were observed, both probably intended to
be used as handstones (upper, active grinding stones or
rubbers) (Fig. 12).
It is obvious that flint hammerstones collected and Workings on the alluvial terrace
partially shaped on the wadi terrace were used as tools Quarry 4 marks the northern limit of the presence
in the production process (Fig. 12F). However, in addi- of stone artefacts on the alluvial terrace in the valley,
tion to about 20 scattered locations with flint frag- an area of highly scattered workings that stretches
ments, probably from hammerstones that broke, only for more than 3 km down towards Split Rock with its
three complete hammerstones were actually observed ancient camps and rock art (Fig. 8). A rough estimate
in the quarry; two relatively large (ca. 15 cm diameter) indicates that there are 100 to 200 workings of small
and one small (ca. 8 cm diameter). Moreover, a couple blocks of mainly reddish silicified sandstone in this
of hard, white (silicified) limestone cobbles were also area. Silicified sandstone blocks appear to have been
found in the quarry; as mentioned above these are transported from the head of the valley as a result of
common on the nearby alluvial terraces and most likely previous river drainage and deposited together with
were brought to the quarry to be used as hammerstones. other debris, including significant amounts of the

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Per Storemyr

Fig. 13. Small area of silicified sandstone work (in the Fig. 14. Unworked block indicating how the silicified sandstone
foreground) on the alluvial terrace. Photo: Per Storemyr. splits along bedding planes. Photo: Per Storemyr.

greenish flint used as hammerstones in the quarries of shelters, stone circles and hearths, indicating camps
(and on the terrace). or resting places. Such features would presumably
The individual silicified sandstone workings are have been easy to spot and, given the topography by
very limited (often only 1 m x 1 m) and rarely feature the quarries, it is unlikely that they would have been
clear roughouts of lower grinding stone slabs (Fig. washed away by flash flood here. Erosion by flash flood
13). It would seem that they were mainly used for is, however, important in the surroundings of Split
the procurement of handstones. Flint fragments can Rock.
usually be found within and beside the workings, but
such fragments are also located away from broken
silicified sandstone blocks. In such cases, it is likely
that they represent trimming of flint cobbles to usable
Methods and volumes of
hammerstones. However, also natural, unworked flint extraction
cobbles were used as hammerstones, as indicated by Quarrying took advantage of the fact that blocks and
their presence in the quarries, but also in at least five larger slabs easily split into thinner slabs along the
depots on the terrace (Fig. 3). Such areas may contain 5 bedding plane of the rock (Fig. 14). Some layers could
to 15 flint cobbles, each with a diameter of about 1015 thus simply be removed by hand. Nevertheless, there
cm. The flint is porous and sometimes cracked, and must have been a means of undertaking splitting,
cannot be used for finer tools. However, it is evidently especially when the sounder cores of larger blocks
suited for use as solid hammerstones. were exploited. No wedging tools (e.g. longish, hard
There is a well-worn path along the entire length stone) were found in the quarries and thus a means of
of the terrace, apparently linking to Darb Ain Amur, loosening slabs would have been to knock carefully on
which passes Split Rock and environs. It is unclear top of the block with a larger hammerstone until the
whether it is a foot and/or donkey path and whether it slab was released. In this way, the blocks would have
is ancient or recent, but it is possible that it is related to been peeled off from above. However, it is reasonable
grinding stone procurement. One tethering stone was to suggest that levers and wedges of wood and/or bone
found on the terrace and at the extreme southern edge were also used. Since the rock easily splits, fire-setting
is a complete, used reddish oval grinding stone meas- would not have been necessary to break it. Fire-setting
uring ca. 39 cm x 27 cm x 3.5 cm; in other words of a was a very common method used in traditional quar-
dimension resembling the roughouts in the quarries. It rying of silicified sandstone (and other stone). In the
is unclear how it ended up here, but it is likely derived context of grinding stone production, good exam-
from camps by the nearby Split Rock and environs, in ples can be found in the extensive quarries in Aswan
which there are a few similar used grinding stones. (Heldal & Storemyr 2007), in the Lake Eyre region in
No ceramic was found in the quarries, their surround- Australia (McBryde 1997) and in Kintampo in Ghana
ings, or on the terraces. Likewise, there were no signs (Rahtz & Flight 1974).

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AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

When a suitable slab was obtained, it must have been (Hassan & Holmes 1985, cf. Caton-Thompson 1952)
roughly shaped in situ, probably using the smaller and features large amounts of lower grinding stones
flint hammerstones. According to the relatively large and smaller oval handstones (Fig. 1). All the lower
chipping marks at the edges of roughouts, the stone is stones are typical oval basin grinding stones, made
rather brittle and fairly easy to form. There is a large from silicified sandstone and usually fine-grained and
body of evidence of the use of hammerstones of similar light reddish to yellowish in colour, although dark-
size and for similar purposes in the grinding stone coloured specimens also occur. Their dimensions are,
quarries in Aswan, although here the grinding stones according to own observations, approximately 30 to
have a different general form than in Kharga (they are 50 cm in length, 22 to 35 cm in width and 2 to 5 cm
boat-shaped, see Heldal & Storemyr 2007). in thickness (though many are very thin due to heavy
The number of grinding stones extracted is difficult use). Oval to egg-shaped and circular flat handstones
to determine. One way of obtaining an estimate would are also made from silicified sandstone; they range in
be to assume that the plateau of Quarry 1 was covered colour from very dark to light yellow and are 10 to 15
with virgin sandstone blocks before the quarrying cm in diameter. Although the colour and hardness of
commenced, for example one block of 0.25 m3 in each some of the stones matches those in our quarries, it is
square metre. If assuming that only two usable grinding unclear whether they can be regarded as the source. In
stones were obtained from each block, the number of this connection, it should be stressed that no attempt
produced stones would have been in the order of 4,000. at provenance studies, including petrographic anal-
Adding 800 stones from Quarry 2 and assuming that yses, has yet been undertaken.
Quarry 3 and 4, as well as the workings on the terrace Most of the used grinding stones at Umm el-Dabadib
would have yielded a total of 100200 stones, a grand have well-prepared, smooth edges and surfaces (Fig. 1)
total would be 5,000. This is probably a very conserva- and thus have been subject to a significant amount of
tive estimate, but it might indicate a range: 100 or 1,000 finishing as compared to the roughouts in the quarries.
produced grinding stones are clearly too few; 20,000 Since no secondary work areas were found in the quar-
are probably too many. ries, it thus seems clear that finishing was undertaken at
occupation sites/campsites. This is in accordance with
observations of grinding stone production processes in
nearby regions, from the Late Palaeolithic (e.g. Roubet
Use of grinding stones in 1989) to the present (e.g. Haaland 1995:164166).
Khargan occupation sites Furthermore, many of the used lower grinding stones
A few fragments of used, lower basin grinding stones have numerous, easily visible small peck marks. In
were spotted among the campsites in the environs modern contexts in the Sudan, this is explained by
of Split Rock. They are generally made from fine- Haaland (1995:169) as a means of roughening the
grained reddish silicified sandstone, not unlike the one surface in order to ease the grinding process.
described above, and their dimensions would seem It must be recalled that grinding stones often have
to correspond to the roughouts present in the quar- been used for grinding mineral matter, such as ochre,
ries. Since they are found in visible Roman and later of which there is abundant evidence in the Nile Valley;
contexts, as judged from ceramics on the surface, it from the Late Palaeolithic at Kubbaniya (Wendorf
may be speculated whether they were reused in these & Schild 1989:799), via the Epipalaeolithic at Elkab
periods, though it cannot be entirely excluded that they (Vermeersch 1978) to the Pharaonic period at Aswan
were actually produced at such a late stage. Conversely, (own observations at the island of Elephantine).
since excavations were not undertaken, such sites may However, Caton-Thompson (1952), who investigated
hide small-scale occupation from earlier periods. numerous Holocene occupation sites in Kharga, did
It is clear that flat, oval basin grinding stones are not report any grinding stones with stains of mineral
primarily found in Holocene prehistoric contexts matter. Moreover, none of the grinding stones inves-
associated with playas in Kharga, as they are e.g. at tigated by the present author in 2007 showed any sign
Nabta Playa (Wendorf & Schild 2001) and elsewhere of stained surfaces. All this is somewhat curious, since
in the Eastern Sahara. One of many examples in it is anticipated that ochre would have been among
Kharga is the playa occupation sites located about 5 the minerals exploited in the Kharga region (own
km to the south of Umm el-Dabadib and 18 km to the observations; see also Beadnell 1909:221). However,
east of Split Rock. This site is dated to 7,6006,100 BC at the moment we have to conclude that the bulk of

77
Per Storemyr

the grinding stones observed were probably used to do not have much desert varnish. However, most have
process wild plants. been buried in playa silts for long periods of time,
surfacing again due to deflation (removal of material
from the surface by wind action).
Dating the quarries
Due to the lack of ceramics and other diagnostic
artefacts, as well as charcoal from hearths and fire- Discussion
setting, the grinding stone quarries cannot be securely Silicified sandstone suitable for grinding stone
dated. Considering the use of similar grinding stones procurement has a wide distribution in the Kharga
in Kharga, it can thus initially be proposed that they depression. Patches of such stone, associated with
may range in age from the early Holocene to the post- special layers in the sandstone or with faulting were
Roman period. However, there are some indications observed on many hills and ridges during our exten-
that a fairly early date is most likely. sive field walks. At some places, faint traces of stone
First, as mentioned above, it seems that large, flat working could also be seen. However, the deposits of
oval basin grinders like those produced in the quar- silicified sandstone by the north scarp seem to be of
ries were predominantly used in the Holocene prehis- the few that contain fair quality material that very
toric period; in Kharga, this would mean the early to easily splits into larger slabs. This might be one of the
middle Holocene (ca. 8,500 to ca. 3,000 BC). Second, reasons that quarrying was undertaken here; yet it is
in the Pharaonic and later periods (ca. 3,000 BC very likely that the quarry discussed here is only the tip
onward), some pottery was usually left in Egyptian of the iceberg, and that more grinding stone quarries
quarries (according to own observations of dozens of exist. This makes it difficult to interpret the organisa-
quarries), though the situation in Kharga is, of course, tion of procurement. Moreover, at the moment we have
different from the Nile Valley. Third, the colour and limited knowledge of the distribution of sites where
thickness of desert varnish in Quarry 1 and 2 would grinding stones were used (but see Caton-Thompson
point to an early date. There is very dark varnish on 1952, Wendorf & Schild 1980, Hassan & Holmes 1985,
exposed fragments that were broken during the quar- Mandel & Simmons 2001), and no knowledge of the
rying process, which indicates that they have been provenance of the grinding stones that have actually
influenced by fairly humid conditions over prolonged been spotted.
periods of time (cf. Liu & Broecker 2007, see also From other contexts, there is evidence for a wide variety
Cremaschi 1996). This would again speak for a use of of procurement strategies. Ethnographic evidence from
the quarry before or during the onset of climate dete- the Darfur region in the Sudan, for example, indicates
rioration from ca. 5,000 BC (Kuper & Krpelin 2006, that grinding grain was (and is) an activity particular
Bubenzer & Riemer 2007). Moreover, weathering and to women and even that each woman undertaking such
aeolian activity (sand blasting) have sometimes thor- activity had her own quarry where she procured rough-
oughly worn down originally sharp edges of broken outs, bringing them back to the village for final shaping
stones. and use (Haaland 1995). In Aboriginal Australia,
Importantly, artefacts of the reddish sandstone in the grinding was also a female activity, but it was the men
small quarries (3 and 4), as well as on the nearby allu- who went on often long expeditions to special quarries
vial terrace, have less varnish than what is the case in to procure roughouts. Such expeditions had the char-
Quarry 1 and 2. There are several possible explanations, acter of ritual journeys, following Dreaming Tracks, for
one of which would be that the quarries simply are which several groups would come together. Moreover,
younger. However, it is more likely that the red stone, grinding stones were part of long-distance exchange
which appears less silicified, is more friable and thus networks, implying that they might end up thou-
more prone to sand blasting than the stone in Quarry sands of kilometres away from their origin (McBryde
1 and 2. This could imply that varnish formation has 1997). Ritual journeys for procurement of other stone
simply not taken place. Sand blasting is particularly resources are a well-known phenomenon, for example
extreme along the alluvial terrace, due to the prevailing related to Neolithic axe production in Britain and else-
northerly winds that sweep down the valley from the where in Europe (e.g. Bradley & Edmonds 1993, Bradley
scarp. 2000). In addition, ritual activity related to procure-
In this connection, it must also be stressed that the ment of stone tools sometimes included the production
grinding stone implements found at occupation sites of rock art, with one of the best examples coming from

78
AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Fig. 15. Rock art in the environs


of Split Rock. Top left) Elephants.
Top right) Meandering lines and a
male figure. Bottom) Male figures
involved in various activities. This
rock art is difficult to date, but can
tentatively be assigned to the period
between ca. 6,000 and 4,000 BC;
see further description in Ikram
2009. Scale: width of each photo ca.
1 m. Photos: Per Storemyr.

Aboriginal Australia and involving silicified sandstone that goes back to the Faiyum Neolithic (cf. Caton-
(Taon 1991). Thompson & Gardner 1934), in which case people
Considering the closest currently known grinding would have had to walk 10 to 20 km from occupation
stone quarries to Kharga, evidence from the extremely sites to obtain the stone.
extensive production areas on the West Bank of the Nile These examples might aid in building hypotheses
at Aswan indicates that in the Late Palaeolithic such about the organisation of grinding stone procure-
procurement took place right beside the seasonal occu- ment in Kharga. Although we have little knowledge
pation sites in Wadi Kubbaniya (Roubet 1989, Wendorf of the wider context of procurement in this area, the
& Schild 1989, Bloxam et al. 2007). Throughout the grinding stone quarries by the north scarp and their
Pharaonic period, production at Aswan reached truly specific context provide some important clues and
enormous proportions and grinding stone was traded ideas:
throughout Egypt.
With regard to trade and exchange, although not Based on the evidence of intensive quarrying in
involving any specific quarry location, Mahmoud & Quarry 1 and 2, the presence of work areas in the
Bard (1993) implied that grinding stones found in quarries and the procurement of special, local flint
Predynastic contexts in the Naq Hammadi region hammerstones for the exploitation, production
in Upper Egypt were derived from at least 150 km must be regarded as organised and not an ad hoc
away in the Eastern Desert. They used their findings activity undertaken whenever a grinding stone was
as a further indication of the long distance exchange needed. The procurement of rather standardised
networks that certainly existed between the Nile formats lends support to this supposition.
Valley and the adjacent deserts between 4,000 and Although the quarries cannot be accurately dated,
3,000 BC. The only other grinding stone produc- there are indications that they should be placed at
tion site known in Egypt is located in the Faiyum, some time in the early to middle Holocene, most
where it is spatially and temporally connected to Old likely before the onset of climate deterioration
Kingdom quarries for elite objects (gypsum vases at (before ca. 5,000 BC).
Umm es-Sawan, Heldal et al. 2009). However, it is not There is no evidence indicating that the peoples
unlikely that the use of this quarry may have a history exploiting the resource lived right beside it.

79
Per Storemyr

However, the presence of stone circles and, addi- In such a perspective, it would be natural that the
tionally, relatively late campsites in the environs of site acquired meaning and significance for those who
Split Rock could indicate that this might have been a returned regularly, just as the grinding stone quarry
preferred place to camp during periods of grinding sites in Aboriginal Australia mentioned above.
stone extraction. In this particular area, given its Thus, a simple model of organisation could involve
topography, flash floods might have washed away relatively small groups of people that regularly,
earlier remains of ephemeral campsites, but prob- perhaps following seasonal patterns of movement,
ably not all traces of potentially extensive occupa- walked from the Kharga Holocene occupations sites
tion sites. associated with playas and spring mounds, up to
The presence of Holocene prehistoric and later several dozens of kilometres from the quarries, for the
rock art in this area is intriguing (Fig. 15). It is not purpose of acquiring grinding stone. The travel might
unthinkable that it was actually made by the peoples have had the character of a short, ritual journey and
exploiting the grinding stone quarries. However, may or may not have involved meeting with other
other reasons for rock art creation are, of course, groups, exchange, as well as performance of rituals,
also possible, including the good water catchment some of which may have involved production of rock
in the area (see also further remarks below). art. A similar situation with regard to Prehistoric rock
The later campsites and rock art in the environs art close to grinding stone quarries is found at Aswan,
of Split Rock are evidently connected to the major but it is yet very difficult to positively associate rock art
desert route of Darb Ain Amur. It is likely that this creation with quarrying since there are so many other
route has a history that goes far back. Moreover, archaeological features in the same area (Storemyr
there are well-worn paths leading to or passing the 2009) just as is the case by the environs of the
grinding stone quarries, perhaps heading towards Kharga grinding stone quarries. This model should not
the significant depressions north of Kharga. This exclude the possibility that more ad hoc procurement,
might indicate that the quarries are in fact located in particular involving handstones, was undertaken at
in an area where desert routes met. suitable outcrops closer to occupation sites.
Whether it is possible to place the grinding stone
Before trying to formulate hypotheses of organisa- quarries within more extensive procurement and
tion, one needs need to get a grip on the longevity of exchange networks, involving e.g. the Nile Valley, is
the quarries. Above, it was inferred that a conserva- doubtful, but should perhaps not be entirely excluded.
tive estimate of production would be 5,000 roughouts However, the available evidence does not allow any
brought away from the quarries. We do not know for inferences at this stage of research.
how long a lower stone would last in use, but from
modern analogies (with sandstone grinders) three
years might be a rough estimate (Haaland 1995:169).
Thus, assuming that a group of 10 families needed to Conclusion
renew their stock of 10 grinding stones every 3 years, The quarry for production of mainly lower basin
they would have needed 100 stones in the course of grinding stones discovered by the north scarp of the
30 years. A quarry producing 5,000 stones would Kharga depression the first in the Western Desert
then have lasted for some 1,500 years. If 100 fami- of Egypt may at first glance look small and insig-
lies used the quarry it may still have lasted for 150 nificant. However, observations and estimates indi-
years. However, if 5,000 produced roughouts is a too cate that thousands of grinding stones were produced
conservative estimate, and we should rather think in here in Holocene prehistory and that procurement
terms of 20,000 stones, then the quarry might have was undertaken in an organised way. The context of
lasted for as much as between 750 years (100 families) the quarry, including its location beyond main, known
and 6,000 years (10 families). occupation sites, near the major desert route of Darb
We have no knowledge of the size of the Holocene Ain Amur and its possible association with rock art
prehistoric population in Kharga and can only use production, points to strategies involving groups
such estimates to illustrate that a seemingly small of people that regularly walked up here to procure
quarry, which may initially look as if it was exploited roughouts to be trimmed to finished grinding stones
over a short period of time only, might have a history at occupation sites up to several dozens of kilometres
spanning hundreds, perhaps even thousands of years. away.

80
AmS-Skrifter 24  A prehistoric grinding stone quarry in the Egyptian Sahara

Cremaschi, M. 1996. The Rock Varnish in the Messak Settafet


Acknowledgements (Fezzan, Libyan Sahara), age, archaeological context and
paleo-environmental implication. Geoarchaeology 11, 5,
The fieldwork was undertaken in 2007 as part of the 393421.
American University in Cairos North Kharga Oasis Egyptian Geological Survey and Mining Authorities 1981.
Survey (NKOS, www.northkhargaoasissurvey.com), Geologic map of Egypt. Ministry of Industry and Mineral
directed by Salima Ikram and Corinna Rossi. I wish Resources, Cairo.
to thank all expedition members Nikolaos Lazaridis, Garba, A. 1997. History of archaeology in the Lake Chad
region of Northeast Nigeria. Nyame Akuma 47, 3841.
Nicholas Warner, Pieter Collet and Leslie Warden- Gatto, M.C. 2011. The Nubian pastoral culture as link between
Anderson for a wonderful expedition and for spot- Egypt and Africa: a view from the archaeological record. In
ting grinding stone! Special thanks to Salima Ikram Exell, K. (ed.). Egypt in its African context, pp. 2129. BAR
for taking me on-board the mission and for comments International Series 2204, Archaeopress, Oxford.
to the manuscript, as well as to Dirk Huyge for great Haaland, R. 1995. Sedentism, cultivation, and plant
domestication in the Holocene Middle Nile region. Journal
field walks and discussions. Gratitude is also extended
of Field Archaeology 22, 2, 157174.
to reviewer Heiko Riemer, an additional anonymous Harrell, J.A. & Storemyr, P. 2009. Ancient Egyptian quarries
reviewer, and Editor Lotte Selsing for taking up impor- an illustrated overview. In Abu-Jaber, N., Bloxam, E.,
tant issues that helped in improving the manuscript. Degryse, P. & Heldal, T. (eds.). QuarryScapes. Ancient
The work was done under the auspices of the former stone quarry landscapes in the Eastern Mediterranean, pp.
Supreme Council of Antiquities, now Ministry of State 750. Geological Survey of Norway Special Publication 12,
Trondheim.
for Antiquities, with inspector Mohammed Ibrahim
Hassan, F. & Holmes, D. 1985. The archaeology of the Umm
Ahmed Ali. Last, but not least, thanks to the team at el-Dabadib area, Kharga Oasis, Egypt. FRSU Research
Pan Arab Tours (Cairo) for taking us safely through the project Report 82035, Cairo University, Cairo.
sand dunes and feeding us well! Heldal, T. 2009. Constructing a quarry landscape from
empirical data. General perspectives and a case study at
the Aswan West Bank, Egypt. In Abu-Jaber, N., Bloxam,
E., Degryse, P. & Heldal, T. (eds.). QuarryScapes. Ancient
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