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Country: |
Italia |
Locality: |
Rivoli, Monsagnasco |
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Region: |
Piemonte |
Area: |
Valsusa |
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Environment & Surface |
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Altitude:
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404 m
Open-air
Shelter
Cave
Portable
Megalithic
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Geography: |
Morainic hilly amphitheatre, ridge, chestnuts wood |
Proximity: |
Path |
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Geology: |
Micaschist, quartz. The boulder was transported there by the glacier. |
Surface: |
Flat, irregular, from 10° to 40° of inclination |
Dimensions:
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Length 1.90 m.
Width 0.90 m.
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Art |
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Description: |
Engravings
Paintings
Painted engravings
High or low-relief
Sculpture
The surface shows a large concentrations of cup-marks, which are regular, of middle size (max 9 cm large) and polished. The footprint-like basin is 37 cm long, 15 cm large and 4 cm deep. Channels reach the basin or the external limit
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Figures: |
total number 66
61 cup-marks, 1 footprint like figure, 4 channels
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Chronology: |
Palaeolithic
Epipalaeolithic - Mesolithic
Neolithic
Copper Age
Bronze Age
Iron Age
Roman
Middle Age
Modern
Unknown
The dating of the cup-marked stone has always been controversial. Various elements anyway make probable an Iron Age dating for the similar Alpine cup-marks, as an iron tool is needed for deep and vertical- wall engravings. The study of the superimpositions in the Rupe Magna (Valtellina - I), where cup-marks cover some warriors figures, clarify an Iron Age dating, also confirmed by the Susa (I) cup-marks, executed over a rock cut with an iron pick and overlapped by a Roman building. In this case the footprint-like basin recalls the middle Iron Age footprints of Valcamonica and the first Iron Age burial slab of Sesto Calende, engraved with cup-marks and footprints.
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Notes: |
The rock was the first cup-marked stone ever discovered in Piedmont, and probably in Italy, in 1881 by G. Piolti, who was studying the morainic area for geologic surveys. He dug all around the stone only finding a "great amount of quartz stones". |
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Bibliography |
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Conservation |
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Status: |
Public
Private
Park
Classified site
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Risk: |
The rock is safe still the wood is preserved. |
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Conservation: |
Good
Quite good
Mediocre
Bad
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Intervention: |
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By |
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Record n. 496 / 807 |
No commercial use is allowed. Specific © is mentioned in the captions or owned by each Author or Institution |
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EuroPreArt, European Prehistoric Art, is a web-based archaeological project funded by the European Union which aims to establish a lasting data-base of European prehistoric art documentation, to launch the base of an European institutional network and to contribute to the awareness of the diversity and richness of European Prehistoric Art.
It is proposed by: Instituto Politécnico de Tomar (IPT, Portugal),
CUEBC - European University Centre for Cultural Heritage (Italy - Europe),
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España),
Asociación Cultural Colectivo Barbaón (España),
Université de Liège (Belgique),
Gotland University College (Sverige),
University College Dublin (Eire),
Cooperativa Archeologica Le Orme dell'Uomo (Italia),
Study Centre and Museum of Prehistoric Art of
Pinerolo (Italia),
The European Centre for Prehistoric Research in the Alto Ribatejo (Portugal),
ArqueoJovem - a youth NGO (Portugal).
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