Metals, Minds and Mobility: Integrating Scientific Data with Archaeological Theory

By: ARMADA, Xose-LoisContributor(s): CHARLTON, Mike | MURILLO-BARROSO, MercedesMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford Oxbow Books 2019 Edition: 1stISBN: 9780000000000Subject(s): Art metal-work, Ancient | Bronze Age | Gold jewelry, Ancient | Metallurgy in archaeology | Silver jewelry, Ancient
Contents:
1. Metals, minds and mobility: An introductionXosé-Lois Armada, Mercedes Murillo-Barroso and Mike Charlton PART 1: TRANSMISSION OF METALLURGICAL TECHNOLOGIES, KNOWLEDGE AND IDEAS 2. On Europe, the Mediterranean and the myth of passive peripheriesTobias L. Kienlin 3. Metal artefacts circulation in the Eneolithic period from southeastern Romania. A case studyCatalin Lazar, Adelina Darie, Gheorghe Niculescu and Migdonia Georgescu 4. On Quimbaya goldwork (Colombia), lost wax casting and ritual practice in America and EuropeAlicia Perea 5. Bronze production and tin provenance - new thoughts about the spread of metallurgical knowledgeBianka Nessel, Gerhard Brügmann, Daniel Berger, Carolin Frank, Janeta Marahrens and Ernst Pernicka PART 2: PRESTIGE ECONOMIES AND EXCHANGE 6. Unequal exchange and the articulation of modes of re-productionMichael Rowlands 7. Why was (and is) silver sexy? Silver during the 4th-3rd millennia in the Near East and MesopotamiaSusan Sherratt 8. G old, conspicuous consumption and prestige - a relationship in need of review. The case of Early and Middle Bronze Age CreteBorja Legarra Herrero PART 3: CIRCULATION OF METAL AS COMMODITIES 9. Biography, prosopography and the density of scientific data: Some arguments from the metallurgy of Early Bronze Age Britain and IrelandPeter Bray 10. The role of pre-Norsemen in trade and exchange of commodities in Bronze Age EuropeLene Melheim, Johan Ling, Zofia A. Stos-Gale, Eva Hjärthner-Holdar and Lena Grandin 11. Lead and copper mining in Priorat county (Tarragona, Spain): From cooperative exchange networks to colonial trade (2600-500 BC)Núria Rafel Fontanals, Ignacio Soriano, Xosé-Lois Armada, Mark A. Hunt Ortiz and Ignacio Montero-Ruiz PART 4: CONCLUDING REMARKS 12. Mobility, minds and metals: The end of archaeological science?Marcos Martinón-Torres
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The BIAA David H. French Library
Shelf 38 - Main Room
G1h ARMAD 31876 Not for loan BOOKS-000000024757

1. Metals, minds and mobility: An introductionXosé-Lois Armada, Mercedes Murillo-Barroso and Mike Charlton PART 1: TRANSMISSION OF METALLURGICAL TECHNOLOGIES, KNOWLEDGE AND IDEAS 2. On Europe, the Mediterranean and the myth of passive peripheriesTobias L. Kienlin 3. Metal artefacts circulation in the Eneolithic period from southeastern Romania. A case studyCatalin Lazar, Adelina Darie, Gheorghe Niculescu and Migdonia Georgescu 4. On Quimbaya goldwork (Colombia), lost wax casting and ritual practice in America and EuropeAlicia Perea 5. Bronze production and tin provenance - new thoughts about the spread of metallurgical knowledgeBianka Nessel, Gerhard Brügmann, Daniel Berger, Carolin Frank, Janeta Marahrens and Ernst Pernicka PART 2: PRESTIGE ECONOMIES AND EXCHANGE 6. Unequal exchange and the articulation of modes of re-productionMichael Rowlands 7. Why was (and is) silver sexy? Silver during the 4th-3rd millennia in the Near East and MesopotamiaSusan Sherratt 8. G old, conspicuous consumption and prestige - a relationship in need of review. The case of Early and Middle Bronze Age CreteBorja Legarra Herrero PART 3: CIRCULATION OF METAL AS COMMODITIES 9. Biography, prosopography and the density of scientific data: Some arguments from the metallurgy of Early Bronze Age Britain and IrelandPeter Bray 10. The role of pre-Norsemen in trade and exchange of commodities in Bronze Age EuropeLene Melheim, Johan Ling, Zofia A. Stos-Gale, Eva Hjärthner-Holdar and Lena Grandin 11. Lead and copper mining in Priorat county (Tarragona, Spain): From cooperative exchange networks to colonial trade (2600-500 BC)Núria Rafel Fontanals, Ignacio Soriano, Xosé-Lois Armada, Mark A. Hunt Ortiz and Ignacio Montero-Ruiz PART 4: CONCLUDING REMARKS 12. Mobility, minds and metals: The end of archaeological science?Marcos Martinón-Torres