Stone ball
In archaeology, a stone ball or petrosphere, "stone", and σφαῖρα is the name for any spherical man-made object of any size that is composed of stone. These mainly prehistoric artifacts may have been created or selected, but altered in some way to perform their specific function, including carving and painting.
File:Alignment Diquis Stone Spheres Museo Nacional CRI 01 2020 1855.jpg|thumb|left|275px|Alignment of five Pre-Columbian stone spheres of Costa Rica in Museo Nacional de Costa Rica.
Several classes of petrospheres exist, such as:
- the stone spheres of Costa Rica,
- painted pebbles from Scotland,
- stone charms from Scotland and sandstone balls from such sites as Traprain Law,
- the carved stone balls, which are mainly from Scotland, although they have also been found in Cumbria and Ireland,
- and carved stone shot for cannons and trebuchets.
Palaeolithic shaped stone balls
Shaped stone balls are found at Palaeolithic sites across Africa, Asia, and Europe, associated with Oldowan, Acheulean, and African Middle Stone Age stone tool industries.The function of shaped stone balls is still debated. Some archaeologists argue that they were deliberately shaped by humans to use as tools; others that they are byproducts of the use of rocks for other purposes.