Quantcast
Channel: Cradle of Civilization
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1677

The Beginning of Metallurgy in the Southern Levant

$
0
0

7,000-Year-Old Metal Object Discovered in Israel

oldest_metal_grave

The Beginning of Metallurgy in the Southern Levant:

A Late 6th Millennium CalBC Copper Awl from Tel Tsaf, Israel

The beginning of metallurgy in the ancient Near East attracts much attention. The southern Levant, with the rich assemblage of copper artifacts from the Nahal Mishmar cave and the unique gold rings of the Nahal Qanah cave, is regarded as a main center of early metallurgy during the second half of the 5th millennium CalBC.

However, a recently discovered copper awl from a Middle Chalcolithic burial at Tel Tsaf, Jordan Valley, Israel, suggests that cast metal technology was introduced to the region as early as the late 6th millennium CalBC.

This paper examines the chemical composition of this item and reviews its context. The results indicate that it was exported from a distant source, probably in the Caucasus, and that the location where it was found is indicative of the social status of the buried individual.

This rare finding indicates that metallurgy was first defused to the southern Levant through exchange networks and only centuries later involved local production. This copper awl, the earliest metal artifact found in the southern Levant, indicates that the elaborate Late Chalcolithic metallurgy developed from a more ancient tradition.

7,000-Year-Old Metal Object Discovered in Israel

Scientists unearth 7,000-year-old copper awl, oldest metal object in Middle East

Copper awl from Jordan Valley is oldest metal ever discovered in Middle East

Oldest Metal Object Ever Found In A Woman’s Grave In Israel

7,000-Year-Old Metal Artifact Unearthed at Tel Tsaf, Israel


Filed under: Uncategorized

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1677

Trending Articles



<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>