The sea, from article Neolithic obsidian stone blades from the Aegean for an article about Aegean obsidian trade

Neolithic peoples create perhaps the world’s first sea trade using Aegean obsidian

A tiny volcanic island with no permanent population handed the ancient world one of its most valuable commodities. Milos — barely 60 square miles of Aegean rock — held veins of obsidian, a naturally occurring volcanic glass that held an edge sharper than almost anything a Neolithic person could produce. By around 6,500 B.C.E., seafarers were crossing open water to reach it, loading their vessels with dark stone, and carrying it to communities spread across the Aegean world. Scholars now recognize this network as the earliest known evidence of deliberate sea trade in human history.

What the evidence shows

  • Aegean obsidian trade: Chemical analysis of artifacts at Neolithic settlements across mainland Greece, western Anatolia, the Balkans, and Cyprus has traced their origin to a single volcanic source — the island of Milos in the Cyclades.
  • Franchthi Cave: The oldest confirmed Melian obsidian found outside Milos comes from Franchthi Cave in the Argolid region of Greece, dated to the Mesolithic period around 9,000 B.C.E. — suggesting the sea crossing predates the Neolithic by several thousand years.
  • 7th millennium network: By the early 7th millennium B.C.E., the trade had intensified into a regional network spanning the Cyclades, mainland Greece, and the western coast of Anatolia, sustained by regular open-water crossings.

An island no one lived on — and everyone needed

Milos sits roughly 87 miles southwest of Athens in the Cyclades. Despite its importance, no evidence suggests anyone lived there permanently until around 4,000 B.C.E. People crossed open water specifically to collect obsidian, then left. That pattern — purposeful, repeated, organized across generations — is what distinguishes this from casual coastal movement.

Obsidian’s value was practical and immediate. It fractures along predictable lines and produces a cutting edge far thinner than flint. Neolithic farmers, hunters, and craftspeople used it for blades, scrapers, and fine tools. The National Archaeological Museum in Athens holds blades recovered from Neolithic settlements across Greece that trace back to Milos — physical proof that the Aegean was being crossed for commerce from the very beginning of settled life in the region.

The crossings were not trivial. Reaching Milos required navigating open water out of sight of the mainland — a genuine feat for people whose vessels have left no trace in the archaeological record.

How archaeologists traced the trade routes

Identifying the origin of an obsidian blade is now a precise science. Researchers use portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry — pXRF analysis — to match the chemical signature of an artifact to a specific volcanic source. Each obsidian deposit carries a distinct geochemical fingerprint, and Milos’s is unmistakable.

That technique has confirmed Melian obsidian at sites far beyond the Aegean basin. Excavations at Dedecik-Heybelitepe on the western coast of Turkey recovered Melian obsidian dated to the late 7th and early 6th millennium B.C.E., pushing the documented reach of the trade to the Anatolian mainland. A survey of the Bozburun Peninsula found Melian obsidian alongside material from Cappadocia and the Dodecanese — evidence of a multi-directional exchange network, not a single point-to-point route.

Research published in the Journal of World Prehistory proposed that maritime colonization of the western Aegean proceeded along already-established sea networks in the early 7th millennium B.C.E. In important ways, the traders didn’t follow the farmers — the traders helped lead them.

Lasting impact

The Aegean obsidian trade did more than move stone. It connected communities that had no other reason to maintain sustained contact, establishing social relationships and mutual dependencies across open water. Those relationships built the conditions for the later Bronze Age networks that carried copper, tin, pottery, and eventually writing across the Mediterranean.

The seafaring knowledge accumulated around these crossings — how to read winds, navigate between islands, manage vessels in open water — became the maritime intelligence that Aegean peoples carried forward for millennia. Scholars trace a direct line from these Neolithic crossings to the Bronze Age Cycladic networks, the Minoan trading system of Crete, and eventually the Greek maritime world that shaped how Western civilization understood the sea.

The obsidian trade also demonstrated something more fundamental: that humans would organize sustained collective effort across dangerous distances to obtain a resource they valued. That impulse — to reach beyond the horizon for something worth having — is the engine behind every trade network that followed.

Blindspots and limits

Almost nothing is known about who actually made these crossings. No boats from this period survive in the Aegean record, and researchers cannot say whether the trade was organized by specialists, embedded in seasonal ritual, managed by community leaders, or simply conducted by ordinary people with boats and knowledge. How the benefits distributed within societies on either end of the route remains equally unknown.

It is also worth noting that the Mesolithic obsidian crossings to Milos — documented as early as 9,000 B.C.E. at Franchthi Cave — may push the origin of purposeful Aegean seafaring well before what most accounts label as the “first” sea trade. The 6,500 B.C.E. date reflects the Neolithic intensification of a practice that was already old.

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For more on this story, see: Maritime History

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