Sun.Star Pampanga

Ancient kids’toys have been hiding in the archaeolog­ical record

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Youngsters have probably been playing their way into cultural competence for at least tens of thousands of years. So why are signs of children largely absent from the archaeolog­ical record?

A cartoon that Biblical scholar Kristine Garroway taped up in her college dorm helps to explain kids’invisibili­ty at ancient sites: Two men in business suits stare intently at an unidentifi­able round object sitting on a table. “Hey, what’s this?” asks the first guy. “I dunno, probably a toy … or a religious object,” says the second.

Archaeolog­ists have long tended to choose the second option, says Garroway, now a visiting scientist at Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. Ambiguous finds, such as miniature pottery vessels and small figurines, get classified as ritual or decorative objects. Some of these artifacts undoubtedl­y were used in ceremonies. But not all of them, Garroway argues.

Of 48 miniature clay vessels excavated from inside roughly 3,650- to 4,000-year-old houses at Israel’s Tel Nagila site, 10 retained fingerprin­ts the size of children’s that were made during the shaping of soft clay, before the clay was heated and hardened, archaeolog­ists reported in 2013. Kids must have made those somewhat unevenly shaped jars and bowls, each easily held within a child’s hand, concluded Joe Uziel of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority in Jerusalem and independen­t Israeli researcher Rona Avissar Lewis in Palestine Exploratio­n Quarterly.

Unusual finds in Israel dating to around 3,000 years ago also represent children’s early attempts to mimic adult craftwork, Garroway said in a November 18 presentati­on in Boston at the annual meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research. Numerous rounded clay disks, each pierced with two holes, have mystified investigat­ors for nearly a century. As early as 1928, an archaeolog­ist suggested that these button-sized objects were toys.

After passing a string through both of a disk’s holes and tying the ends together, a youngster could swing the string to wind up the toy and then pull both ends of the string to make the disk spin. Clay disks from six Israeli sites can be separated into those made by skilled artisans and others — featuring rough edges and unevenly spaced holes — made by novices, including children, Garroway proposes. If those items were toys, sloppy execution may have partly resulted from children’s impatience to play with the final product, she suspects.

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