Macrolithic tools are linked to daily activities and, fundamentally, to settlements, hence
their importance for the study of Late Prehistoric societies. However, these objects are
also associated with funerary contexts, but have not often been analysed holistically.
This paper studies an assemblage of macrolithic elements from three collective tombs
from the third millennium cal. BC at the site of La Orden-Seminario (Huelva, Spain),
from a theoretical and methodological perspective based on the biography of the object.
Our analysis focuses on typology, raw materials, technology, function and burial
context. The results show that the tools can be linked to domestic activities such as the
grinding of cereals and the processing of plant materials, as well as for the production
and maintenance of the elements used in these activities. The analysed objects display
long biographies of use and, in some cases, we have documented intentional breakage
for their deposition in the tombs. The patterns of deposition in the funerary contexts
reflect social practices related to the ritual and symbolic behaviours surrounding death
and the relationship with everyday objects.