Page 50 - J. C. Turner "History and Science of Knots"
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On Knots and Swamps                      39

              the Maglemose period (C14 date about 8200 B.P.) Among the finds was
              a bone point, barbed, still fastened to the remains of a wooden shaft
              by a lashing of turned string, probably made of lime bast. The string
              had been wound tightly and regularly around the shaft and point, but
              unfortunately, precisely the ends where the knots must have been had
              disappeared (Fig. 4).
        Amose, middle Zealand. Ronne, 1989.
              Four natural stones found in a bog, three of which still had rope around
              them whereas the fourth had traces of rope. All four were lying on top
              of what were possibly the remains of a net, which was too fragile to be
              preserved. The rope was made of lime bast. No knots were preserved.
              The site was the garbage dump of a late Ertebolle settlement on a low
              island in the bog, but the large amount of pottery found makes the
              author suspect that the site might have been an offering place as well.
        These ten sites are to my knowledge the only ones so far where artefacts
       have been found of which it can be assumed with reasonable certainty that
       they originally contained knots. Even so, only three knots have actually been
       preserved: a clove hitch, something resembling a granny, and a row of half
       hitches.
            As was to be expected, all ten sites are water-logged sites. Five of them
       were coastal-or lake-settlements, and in all five the artefacts concerned were
       directly connected with fishing: a fishhook, a leister, a harpoon, netsinkers, a
       line float. The five other sites are all offerings in bogs, but here the contexts
       in which the knots were originally used are more diverse: two nooses used to
       hang or strangle people, two carrying slings for jars, one carrying bag (if that
       interpretation is correct).
            In nine of the ten cases the material used for the rope was of vegetable
       origin. The one exception was the piece of fishline from Tybrind Vig, which
       had been made of some animal product. Five of the remaining nine artefacts
       had rope out of tree bast, and in four cases this could be more closely identified
       as lime bast. In three cases no more could be said than that the material was
       vegetable, but of one of these it could be established that it had not been tree
       bast. Finally, in one case (Skjoldnaes) nettle-fibres had been used.
            The rope could be produced by braiding (Bokilde), but spinning and/or
       twining seems to have been more common (eight, perhaps nine cases).
            It is clear that only the bog offerings offer a glimpse of the uses of knots
       and knotting in activities other than those immediately connected with water.
       It is therefore the more unfortunate that only one of those five sites has pro-
       duced an actual knot (Sigersdal, Fig. 1), and a partly undone one at that. Of
       course, a source of potential bias with offerings is that they have strong reli-
       gious/magical overtones, and that perhaps certain types of knots were reserved
       specifically for these contexts, and not used in others.
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