From the jaws of the “Leviathan”: A sperm whale tooth from the Valencina Copper Age Megasite
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Abstract
During the excavations undertaken in 2018 at the Nueva Biblioteca sector of the
Valencina Copper Age mega-site, in south-west Spain, an exceptional sperm-whale
tooth was found inside a non-burial pit. This remarkable object is the first of its kind
ever found for Late Prehistoric Iberia. Due to its rarity and importance, a multidisciplinary
study was carried out, including photogrammetric 3D modelling, as well as
taphonomic, paleontological, technological and contextual analysis. This led to a full
characterisation of the artefact through the analysis of its bioerosion traces, anthropogenic
marks, depositional context and socio-cultural background. The ensuing
discussion covers the history and processes the tooth went through from the death of
the animal and disposal on the seabed, through the disarticulation of the tooth to its
collection in a coastal environment and its subsequent use and deposition in the pit
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Bibliographic citation
Ramírez-Cruzado Aguilar-Galindo, S., Luciañez-Triviño, M., Muñiz Guinea, F., Cáceres Puro, L. M., Toscano Grande, A., Díaz-Guardamino, M., Vargas Jiménez, J. M., Schuhmacher, T. X., Martínez Sánchez, R. M., Guillamón Dávila, S., Rodríguez Vidal, J., & García Sanjuán, L. (2025). From the jaws of the “Leviathan”: A sperm whale tooth from the Valencina Copper Age Megasite. PLOS One, 20(5), e0323773. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323773














