Copper Artifacts: Correlation with Source Types of Copper Ores

Six out of eight minor chemical elements, determined by spectroscopic and neutron-activation techniques, were found to be critical in computing a probability that a given copper artifact was derived from one of three types of copper ore: native metal, oxidized ore, reduced ore. Two elements, gold an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 1966-06, Vol.152 (3728), p.1504-1506
Hauptverfasser: Friedman, A. M., Conway, M., Kastner, M., Milsted, J., Metta, D., Fields, P. R., Olsen, E.
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container_issue 3728
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container_title Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
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creator Friedman, A. M.
Conway, M.
Kastner, M.
Milsted, J.
Metta, D.
Fields, P. R.
Olsen, E.
description Six out of eight minor chemical elements, determined by spectroscopic and neutron-activation techniques, were found to be critical in computing a probability that a given copper artifact was derived from one of three types of copper ore: native metal, oxidized ore, reduced ore. Two elements, gold and tin, were apparently alloyed deliberately in many artifacts from both the Old World and the New World.
doi_str_mv 10.1126/science.152.3728.1504
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source Science Magazine; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Antimony
Arsenic
Charcoal
Chisels
Copper
Gold
Impurities
Oxides
Silver
Tin
title Copper Artifacts: Correlation with Source Types of Copper Ores
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