Metals, Minds and Mobility
Integrating Scientific Data with Archaeological Theory
Xosê-Lois Armada editor Mercedes Murillo-Barroso editor Mike Charlton editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxbow Books
Published:26th Oct '18
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Metals, Minds and Mobility seeks to integrate archaeometallurgical data with archaeological theory to address longstanding questions about mechanisms of exchange, mobility and social complexity in prehistory. The circulation of metal has long been viewed as a catalyst for social, economic and population changes in Europe. New techniques and perspectives derived from archaeological science can shed new light on the understanding of the movement of people, materials and technological knowledge. In recent years these science-based approaches have situated mobility at the forefront of the archaeological debate. Advances in the characterisation of metals and metallurgical residues combined with more sophisticated approaches to data analysis add greater resolution to provenance studies.
Though offering better pictures of artefact source, the explanation of artefact distribution across geographic space requires the use of theoretically informed models and solid archaeological evidence to discern differences between the circulation of raw materials, ingots, objects, craftspeople and populations. Bringing together many leading expert contributions address topics that include the invention, innovation and transmission of metallurgical knowledge; archaeometric based models of exchange; characterization and discrimination of different modes of material circulation; and the impact of metals on social complexity.
The 13 papers are organised in three main sections dealing with key debates in archaeology: transmission of metallurgical technologies, knowledge and ideas; prestige economies and exchange; and circulation of metal as commodities and concludes with a review current approaches, situating the volume in a broader context and identifying future research directions.
These papers show a fantastic integration of studies of prehistoric metals with studies of minds that made them and/or their mobility, and indeed at least makes headway in its aims of integrating scientific data with archaeological theory. * Archaeological Review from Cambridge *
I recommend the volume to anyone wishing to review the current state of the art in archaeometallurgical research. It is unusual in bringing together perspectives from the Near East across Europe to Central America; giving the reader the opportunity to examine a range of material and analyses that are rarely published together. * Archaeological Journal *
ISBN: 9781785709050
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
200 pages