The domestication of metals : the rise of complex metal industries in Anatolia / by K. Aslihan Yener.
Material type: TextSeries: Culture and history of the ancient Near East ; v. 4.Publication details: Leiden Boston : Brill, 2000. Description: ix, 210 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cmISBN: 9004118640 (hc : alk. paper)Subject(s): Copper age -- Turkey | Bronze age -- Turkey | Metal-work, Prehistoric -- Turkey | Turkey -- AntiquitiesDDC classification: 939/.2 LOC classification: GN778.32.T9 | Y45 2000Review: "Over the decades, Anatolian metal artifacts have been the focus of extensive scientific analysis. Now fifteen years of field work, current surveys, excavations, and analytical programs regarding transformations in metallurgy in this highly metalliferous region have enabled Aslihan Yener in Domestication of Metals to focus for the first time on the organization of production within a broader social context." "In so doing, the author introduces convincing evidence for a revision of existing models concerning the metal industry. The volume locates a core of technological innovation in the highland zones, where critical resources are in close proximity to the developing polities in the fertile, agricultural lowlands. The Early Bronze Age tin mine, Kestel, and the contemporary workshop and habitation site of nearby Goltepe, illustrate an industrial complex specializing in the production of tin metal. New metallurgical data explain the organization and management of a range of interactive technologies in prehistoric states in Anatolia from 8000-2000 B.C." "Readership: All those interested in the instrumental analyses of ancient metals, archaeometallurgy, the role of ancient technology in the emergence of complex societies, Anatolian archaeology, Early Bronze Age, mining."--Jacket.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | The BIAA David H. French Library Shelf 38 - Main Room | G1h YENER 19334 | Not for loan | BOOKS*00000002563 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [129]-159) and index.
"Over the decades, Anatolian metal artifacts have been the focus of extensive scientific analysis. Now fifteen years of field work, current surveys, excavations, and analytical programs regarding transformations in metallurgy in this highly metalliferous region have enabled Aslihan Yener in Domestication of Metals to focus for the first time on the organization of production within a broader social context." "In so doing, the author introduces convincing evidence for a revision of existing models concerning the metal industry. The volume locates a core of technological innovation in the highland zones, where critical resources are in close proximity to the developing polities in the fertile, agricultural lowlands. The Early Bronze Age tin mine, Kestel, and the contemporary workshop and habitation site of nearby Goltepe, illustrate an industrial complex specializing in the production of tin metal. New metallurgical data explain the organization and management of a range of interactive technologies in prehistoric states in Anatolia from 8000-2000 B.C." "Readership: All those interested in the instrumental analyses of ancient metals, archaeometallurgy, the role of ancient technology in the emergence of complex societies, Anatolian archaeology, Early Bronze Age, mining."--Jacket.