Meroe, Sudan was an important royal and industrial centre of the Kingdom of Kush from the 3rd Century BC, through the 4th Century AD. The site is noted amongst archaeometallurgists for its extensive remains of iron production. UCL Qatar’s Sudan Project (2012-present) includes investigations of these remains in order to model the technology and its impact on the social, economic and natural environments. As a part of this research, a series of iron smelting experiments was conducted in January 2015. One goal of these experiments was to evaluate the character and performance of local geological resources, especially potential ores. HH-XRF was one tool used to evaluate and sort ores prior to the experiments. This dataset provides an over...
This paper seeks to contribute to the growing knowledge of iron production in ancient Sudan by exami...
AbstractThis paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusi...
Technologies do not exist in a vacuum but rather are embedded within a greater social-historical-eco...
The Royal City of Meroe,ca.200 km north of Khartoum in the modern-day Republic of the Sudan, was an ...
Recent excavations of a Late to Post-Meroitic furnace workshop at Meroe, Sudan prompted questions co...
Ongoing archaeometallurgical research at the Royal City of Meroe and the nearby Meroitic town of Ham...
This work constitutes the data and analytical scripts used to examine the inputs and products of a s...
Recent archaeometallurgical investigations in Sudan have provided 97 radiocarbon dates which are use...
The remains of extensive iron industries form prominent features at key locations within the Meroiti...
The Kingdom of Kush, located in modern-day Sudan, is famed for its ‘black pharaoes’. Less familiar t...
Since it was first ‘discovered’ in the late 1700s by the Scottish explorer James Bruce, Meroe Royal ...
This paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusing on on...
This paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusing on on...
Meroe is one of Africa's most famous archaeological sites, renowned not least for its evidence of ir...
The Royal City of Meroe, a capital of the ancient Kushite kingdom in modern Sudan, is renowned for i...
This paper seeks to contribute to the growing knowledge of iron production in ancient Sudan by exami...
AbstractThis paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusi...
Technologies do not exist in a vacuum but rather are embedded within a greater social-historical-eco...
The Royal City of Meroe,ca.200 km north of Khartoum in the modern-day Republic of the Sudan, was an ...
Recent excavations of a Late to Post-Meroitic furnace workshop at Meroe, Sudan prompted questions co...
Ongoing archaeometallurgical research at the Royal City of Meroe and the nearby Meroitic town of Ham...
This work constitutes the data and analytical scripts used to examine the inputs and products of a s...
Recent archaeometallurgical investigations in Sudan have provided 97 radiocarbon dates which are use...
The remains of extensive iron industries form prominent features at key locations within the Meroiti...
The Kingdom of Kush, located in modern-day Sudan, is famed for its ‘black pharaoes’. Less familiar t...
Since it was first ‘discovered’ in the late 1700s by the Scottish explorer James Bruce, Meroe Royal ...
This paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusing on on...
This paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusing on on...
Meroe is one of Africa's most famous archaeological sites, renowned not least for its evidence of ir...
The Royal City of Meroe, a capital of the ancient Kushite kingdom in modern Sudan, is renowned for i...
This paper seeks to contribute to the growing knowledge of iron production in ancient Sudan by exami...
AbstractThis paper describes a multifaceted approach to the investigation of iron slag heaps, focusi...
Technologies do not exist in a vacuum but rather are embedded within a greater social-historical-eco...