Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses UC SAN DIEGO ARCHAEOLOGISTS DISCOVER LARGEST BRONZE AGE METAL FACTORY IN MIDDLE EAST
UC SAN DIEGO
ARCHAEOLOGISTS DISCOVER LARGEST BRONZE AGE METAL FACTORY IN MIDDLE EAST
Working in a remote desert area in
southern Jordan, archaeologists from the University of California, San Diego
have discovered the largest Early Bronze Age metal factory in the Middle East,
dating to ca. 2700 BC. The discovery was reported in the June 2002 issue
of the British journal, Antiquity.
The project was funded primarily through the C.
Paul Johnson Family Charitable Foundation (Napa, CA) and the National Geographic
Society Committee on Research and Exploration. The National Geographic
story on the discovery can be viewed at: National
Geographic.
Hundreds of clay casting molds for manufacturing
copper ingots, axes, chisels, and pins were found on the ancient ‘factory
floor,’ according to UCSD anthropologist Thomas Levy, who led the
international team, along with UCSD research associate Russell Adams. Thousands
of stone hammers, anvils, crucibles, metal objects and ancient metallurgical
debris were also unearthed at the site, making the discovery much larger than
other known contemporary Bronze Age metal production centers in Turkey, Cyprus,
Israel, Oman and other parts of the Middle East.
The discovery of the Early Bronze Age metal
factory in Jordan and its vast assemblage of artifacts, is due in large part to
an earthquake that buried the deposits in place for over four thousand years.
The team, led by Levy made extensive excavations at the site of Khirbat
Hamra Ifdan in the Faynan district, some 50 km south of the Dead Sea in Jordan.
During two field seasons in 1999 and 2000, Levy and Adams, leading teams
of students from the U.S., England and Canada and assisted by local Bedouin
workers, excavated a large section of this important metal production site that
corresponds with the rise of the first cities throughout the eastern
Mediterranean.
Using new applications of Geographic Information
Systems (GIS), the UCSD team was able to map out and reconstruct all the stages
in the production of copper tools and other objects that played an important
role in ancient Near Eastern trade networks that stretched across southern
Jordan and Israel to Egypt more than 4,500 years ago. Lead isotope studies
by project archaeometallurgist.
Professor Andreas Hauptmann of the German Mining
Museum (Bochum) have identified the Early Bronze Age ‘recipe’ for producing
high quality copper metal. In addition, the chemical evidence for linking
objects found in Israel with those recently discovered in Jordan are helping to
identify the actual ancient trade routes that crossed this part of the Middle
East during the Early Bronze Age.
As part of UCSD’s research project in
Jordan,
the site of Khirbat Hamra Ifdan and other locales excavated by the team have
been prepared for eco-tourism following an innovative conservation plan modeled
along the lines of those used at state parks in the southwestern US
Working closely with team member Dr. Mohammad Najjar, director of excavations at
the Jordan Department of Antiquities, trails, site restoration work and signs in
Arabic and English have been established at the excavated sites.
“Despite the ongoing tensions in the Middle
East, we plan to continue our project in the Faynan district by examining sites
related to metal production in the Iron Age (ca.
1200–586 BC) when the Biblical Edomites established their first kingdom,”
said Levy.
“While the current political climate may not be
good for eco-tourism, we are helping to establish the infrastructure of
eco-tourism for future visitors in one of the most economically depressed
regions of Jordan. We hope and pray for better times in the Middle East.”
Over the last two decades, Levy has directed and
co-directed numerous archaeological digs in the Middle East, including a major
excavation in Israel’s Negev Desert, which led to the discovery of an ancient
Egyptian colony in 1996. In 1997, he directed a National Geographic
expedition in Southern Jordan, where he led a team of scientists, by donkey,
with the aim of discovering the ancient copper trail and reconstructing the
mining and smelting technologies used more than 6,000 years ago.
Media Contact: Dolores
Davies, (858) 534-5994
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a University
of California, San Diego
Publishing date: July 2, 2002
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