The artefacts in general reflect that of a Cardial tradition and show ornamental similarities to neighbouring areas, namely the south-eastern part of France, Mediterranean coast, and the Pyrenean and pre-Pyrenean areas.
Bones Wooden artefacts The Neolithic communities exploited mainly laurel and oak as firewood, A greater variability is documented among the wood species for the manufacture of tools. Woods were selected for their physical and mechanical properties. Thus, yew was used for bows and willow for arrow shafts. Combs, double-stitched needles, sickles and digging sticks were made of boxwood. Wooden containers and shovels were made of deciduous oak. Same type of objects were done in different species, such as the adze handles that are in yew, oak, pine or boxwood.
Basketry and plant fibres The cordages, ropes and baskets found in La Draga were also made of different woody fibres (
Tilia sp.,
Clematis sp.) or herbaceous fibres (
Urtica sp.;
monocotyledon such as
Poaceae,
Cyperaceae,
Typhaceae). Amongst these objects were found a whole roll of clematis, a plant fibre with no manufacture, fragments of basketry made from rushes and hemp, and fragments of rope. Various manufacturing patterns were identified: braiding, twisting and knotting. Others could have been used as containers, especially for storing cereal seeds. All these tools are similar to those used by ancient and modern communities during processes such as spinning and weaving. The combs are used to card the weave before spinning or to press the weft during weaving, making it denser and more compact. Double-stitched needles can be used as a shuttle, passing the weft yarn from one side of the loom to the other during weaving. They can also be used as a spindle for spinning by hand or with a fusayola, a piece that is attached to the spindle and allows faster spinning. Wooden and bone instruments with central perforations have been found that could have had this function. The bone tools include awls, used to select and separate the warp threads or to press the weft during weaving. Three needle fragments have also been recorded. Other tools, such as possible tensioners and warpers, have also been found. Finally, the studies carried out to date indicate that the fibre used was of plant origin, possibly nettle (
Urtica dioica); and animal, sheep and/or goat hair.
Seeds The extraordinary preservation conditions at La Draga site have made it possible to study the largest collection of remains of seeds and fruits in the whole of the Neolithic period on the Iberian Peninsula (circa 400,000 remains). This important set of remains has been the basis for understanding the agriculture practised by the inhabitants of the settlement and the fruits they harvested. The farmers of La Draga were among the first to practise agriculture in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula. The main crops grown in the settlement were durum wheat (
Triticum durum/turgidum) and two-row barley or palm barley (
Hordeum distichon). These cereals are intensively cultivated in small permanent fields tilled by hand (with wooden digging sticks). A third important crop documented at the site is opium poppy (
Papaver somniferum), possibly used to extract oil from the seeds, but also for its psychotropic properties. In addition to the consumption of agricultural products, it has been observed how hazelnuts (
Corylus avellana), acorns (
Quercus sp.), blackberries (
Rubus ulmifolius) and blueberries (
Prunus spinosa), among other autochthonous species, were collected. It seems that cherries (
Prunus avium) may also have been consumed and their stones used to make beads. In this way, and with the addition of meat resources, the inhabitants of La Draga ensured their daily survival.
Ceramic Most of the ceramic materials at La Draga presented the typical decorative features of Neolithic
Cardial ware tradition. The most commonly used decoration is that made with the rim of the
mollusc of the genus Cardium, both in the form of impressions, forming jagged lines, with slightly curved sections, interrupted after each impression; and the dragging of the entire rim, forming incised stripes. More rarely, there are also impressions or incisions made with a comb, fingernail, spatula or awl; and reliefs in the form of a smooth cord. Ceramic assemblages have a predominance of large and medium thicknesses, which should correspond to vessels used for the storage, cooking and consumption of different foodstuffs. The pottery have a limited variety of shapes, with rounded profiles and hemispherical, subspherical with or without a neck, and cylindrical bases. The manufacturing process is coiling. After firing, the pottery is finished by smoothing and polishing and decorated with impressions and incisions on part of its surface. The proportion of decorated vessels should be very high, close to 70-80%, in the oldest level of the site (Cardial chronology) while somewhat lower in the most recent level.
Lithic tools Many of the lithic tools used were made of various types of rock. Some knapped tools were made of opaque and darked-colour siliceous rocks, coming respectively from the mountain of Montjuic in Barcelona (115 km south) and from the Sigean Narbonne basin situated in France (110 km north). Flints were almost exclusively used in different tools such as sickle blades, drills, arrowheads and as utensils to scrape materials such as wood, bone, horn and skin. Rocks of local origin, such as vein and hyaline quartz, were used in smaller quantities. Polished stone blades were made of metamorphic rocks (schist and hornfels) being the active parts of the axes, from which several handles have been recovered. These utensils are generally related to woodworking and have an asymmetric active edge that allows them to be held in a way that the active part is perpendicular to the handle. Moreover, macrolithic tools were made of granular rocks such as basalt and granite, and used for the processing of some vegetables, such as grinding cereals. Other finer-grained rocks such as stoneware clay and sandstones could be used to grind, polish and sharpen various materials such as bones and wood. == Organisation of the site ==