TY - BOOK AU - Chernykh,E.N. TI - Ancient metallurgy in the USSR: the early metal age T2 - New studies in archaeology SN - 0521252571 AV - GN778.22.S65 C48 1991 U1 - 947/.01 20 PY - 1992/// CY - New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Bronze age KW - Former Soviet republics KW - Excavations (Archaeology) KW - Soviet Union KW - Metal-work, Prehistoric KW - Antiquities N1 - Translated from Russian; Includes bibliographical references and index N2 - One of the leading Soviet archaeologists describes the development of ancient mining and metallurgy in the northern half of Eurasia. While the first traces of metallurgical activity date from between the seventh and the sixth millennium BC, significant mining developed only in the fifth millennium BC, in the northern Balkans and Carpathians. Metal producing centres were in these northern 'barbarian peripheral' regions rather than in the Near East and Asia Minor, areas traditionally associated with early classical civilization. Professor Chernykh describes successive periods of metallurgical activity in different regions: the Carpatho-Balkan Metallurgical Province of the Copper Age: the Circumpontic of the Early and Middle Bronze Age: and the Eurasian, European Caucasian, Central Asian and Irano-Afghan of the Late Bronze Age. He provides detailed information about the different groups of copper and bronze artefacts, their chemical composition, and their dispersion in time and space. He analyses the international metallurgical trade and division of labour and, finally, the collapse of the sociocultural systems in these metallurgical centres in the first millennium BC ER -