Rock cupules () are artificially made depressions on rock surfaces that resemble the shape of an inverse spherical cap or dome. They were made by direct percussion with hand-held hammer-stones, on vertical, sloping or horizontal rock surfaces. Cupules are widely believed to be the world's most common
rock art
In archaeology, rock art is human-made markings placed on natural surfaces, typically vertical stone surfaces. A high proportion of surviving historic and prehistoric rock art is found in caves or partly enclosed rock shelters; this type also ...
motifs, found in huge numbers in every continent except Antarctica. They were produced in many cultures, from the
Lower Paleolithic
The Lower Paleolithic (or Lower Palaeolithic) is the earliest subdivision of the Paleolithic or Old Stone Age. It spans the time from around 3 million years ago when the first evidence for stone tool production and use by hominins appears in ...
to the 20th century, and they can be found on most lithologies. Similar artifacts from lithic
Native American cultures are also known as
cupstone
Cupstones, also called anvil stones, pitted cobbles and nutting stones, among other names, are roughly discoidal or amorphous groundstone artifacts among the most common lithic remains of Native American culture, especially in the Midwestern ...
s.
The name cupule derives from the Late Latin ''cūpula'', “little cask”.
Appearances
Cupules are usually between in diameter, although larger specimens are occasionally seen. They occur commonly in groupings that may number several hundred; they may be arranged in geometric formations, such as aligned sets, or they occur in unstructured, random groups.
Some specimens in the southern Kalahari Desert are suggested to be in the order of 410,000 years old, and those of two sites in central India should be even earlier. In Middle Paleolithic or Middle Stone Age contexts, cupules occur in Africa and Australia, and are attributable to that era also in Europe. They seem to become less common in the course of the European Upper Paleolithic, but still occur occasionally. Cupules are extremely common in the Neolithic and the Metal Ages of Europe, Asia and Africa, and in medieval Europe.
Purpose
Little is definitely known about the purpose or significance of cupules. Many meanings or purposes have been suggested in the literature (one review lists 71). In a number of cases cupules were demonstrated to mark specific rocks used as
lithophone
A lithophone is a musical instrument consisting of a rock or pieces of rock which are struck to produce musical notes. Notes may be sounded in combination (producing harmony) or in succession (melody). It is an idiophone comparable to instrumen ...
s; in some cases they served in board games; but other credible ethnographic interpretations of their former cultural functions have been secured in very few instances. These cannot necessarily be extrapolated to other corpora, which are widely separated temporally as well as spatially. Even the identification of cupules remains tenuous: archaeologists have encountered difficulties in distinguishing cupules from other features, such as
potholes,
mortars,
querns, metates, tacitas, and small solution pans.
Creation
Typically cupules were created by direct percussion, i.e. using hand-held hammer-stones. Replication studies have shown that the time required for their production varies greatly, depending on the rock type. It can take one minute to create a 12 mm deep cupule on weathered sandstone, but 45,000 and 60,000 hammer-stone strokes on unweathered quartzite. The resistance of a rock to kinetic impact is determined by its hardness, toughness and strength. Hardness, in this context, is a complex articulation of several factors, essentially a measure of how resistant rock is to various kinds of permanent shape change when a compressive force is applied to it. These factors include scratch or abrasion resistance (
Rosiwal scale
The Rosiwal scale is a hardness scale in mineralogy, with its name given in memory of the Austrian geologist August Karl Rosiwal. The Rosiwal scale attempts to give more quantitative values of scratch hardness, unlike the Mohs scale which is a qua ...
), toughness, strength, ductility, indentation hardness (measured by the
Brinell scale and expressed in BHN, or measured by the
Vickers test
The Vickers hardness test was developed in 1921 by Robert L. Smith and George E. Sandland at Vickers Ltd as an alternative to the Brinell method to measure the hardness of materials. The Vickers test is often easier to use than other hardness t ...
and expressed in kg/mm²) and brittleness factor. Abrasion hardness, indentation hardness and brittleness factor (ratio of the uniaxial compressive strength and the uniaxial tensile strength) combine to determine the “composite hardness index” ''θ'', which governs the production coefficient ''ρ'':
''ρ = V θ''²
The approximate cupule volume ''V'' is determined by:
''V'' = π × ''d'' × (''R²'' + ''r²'' + ''R'' × ''r'') ⁄ 3
in which ''r'' = mean radius at rim and ''d'' = cupule depth. The mean radius is close to half the sum of two radii measured at right angles to each other. The kinetic energy applied in the production of cupules can be determined experimentally, kinetic energy ''Ek'' being the ability of a mass in motion to have a physical effect:
''Ek = M v''²
in which ''M'' = quantity of mass in motion, ''v'' = velocity in straight line. It amounts to tens of kilo-Newtons in the case of unweathered quartzite.
[Bednarik, RG 2015. The tribology of cupules. ''Geological Magazine'' 58(6): 899–911.] This cumulative application of focused force has occasionally led to
kinetic energy metamorphosis
Kinetic energy metamorphosis (KEM) is a recently discovered tribological process of gradual crystal re-orientation and foliation of component minerals in certain rocks. It is caused by very high, localized application of kinetic energy. The require ...
in sedimentary siliceous rocks, a phenomenon first identified in cupules but since recognized in many geological contexts.
References
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Rock art
Prehistoric art
Megalithic symbols