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Prehistoric copper in Bulgaria: its composition and provenance

Eurasia antiqua : Zeitschrift fur Archaologie Eurasiens / Deutsches Archaologisches Institut, Eurasien-Abteilung3 • Published In 1997 • Pages: 41-180

By: Pernicka, Ernest, Begemann, F., Schmitt-Strecker, S., Todorova, Khenrieta, Kuleff, I..

Abstract
Pernicka et al. examined modern copper sources to determine their trace elements and then compared those findings to trace elements in prehistoric copper artifacts to determine sources and to reconstruct early production and exchange systems. Copper artifacts from the Early Chalcolithic through the Early Bronze Age from Bulgaria and some from Serbia and Montenegro are examined. Only data pertaining to the Late Chalcolithic through the Transitional Periods were indexed for Outline of Material Cultures (OCM) codes. Pernicka et al. conclude that a variety of copper sources were used during the Late Chalcolithic, that mixing of metals through remelting was not common, and that artifacts were produced at different sites. The authors speculate, 'the Cucuteni-Tripolye metal from Moldavia … may derive from the Medni Rid area [and not] Ai Bunar [as previously assumed.] This distribution pattern follows the same trade routes as e.g. those of Spondylus shells, namely along the Black Sea coast and the lower Danube.' (page 141).
Subjects
Identification
Mineral resources
Mining and quarrying
Metallurgy
Settlement patterns
tradition
Southeastern Europe Late Chalcolithic
HRAF PubDate
2002
Region
Europe
Sub Region
Southeastern Europe
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Archaeologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
Sarah Berry ; 2001
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
Late Chalcolithic Period through the Final Chalcolithic Period
Coverage Place
Bulgaria and Serbia and Montenegro
Notes
Ernest Pernicka, F. Begemann, S. Schmitt-Strecker, H. Todorova and I Kuleff
Includes bibliographical references (p. 169-178)
LCSH
Copper Age--Europe, eastern