The recycling (remelting) of precious metals is commonly seen as a major impediment in provenancing studies. Yet in cases where known silver sources are both limited and geochemically well-characterized, there are opportunities to evaluate silver flows at different temporal and geographical scales. Here, we provide a theoretical and analytical framework for assessing the impact of precious metal recycling in a historical context in which silver remelting was the norm: Viking Age Scandinavia (c.800–1050 ce). Harnessing new, large-scale, Pb isotope and trace element datasets, we demonstrate the potential for revealing the contribution of Western European and Islamic silver sources to discrete archaeological assemblages and defined coin and ar...
Based on 550 metal analyses, this study sheds decisive light on how the Nordic Bronze Age was founde...
Hacksilber facilitated trade and transactions from the beginning of the second millennium BCE until ...
The Viking Age (800–1050 A.D.) is also called the “Silver Age”. Despite the fact that no silver mine...
We present a high precision, minimally-destructive geochemical (lead isotope and trace element) anal...
Silver, Butter, Cloth advances current debates about the nature and complexity of Viking economic sy...
We present a high precision, minimally-destructive geochemical (lead isotope and trace element) anal...
The rich and long-lasting Nordic Bronze Age was dependent throughout on incoming flows of copper and...
The purpose with this work is to try and see an economic development on Gotland during the Viking Ag...
The late seventh century introduction of silver coinage marked a transformation in the economy of No...
This technological and provenance analysis of metal artifacts from a unique Viking-age hoard found i...
This second volume concerning the excavations in the Viking-period town Kaupang in 1998–2003 examine...
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological...
This chapter examines the use of silver as a medium of payment in the Early Viking Period. Kaupang h...
The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resourc...
The dissertation deals with the archaeological context of Baltic-zone silver hoards deposited in th...
Based on 550 metal analyses, this study sheds decisive light on how the Nordic Bronze Age was founde...
Hacksilber facilitated trade and transactions from the beginning of the second millennium BCE until ...
The Viking Age (800–1050 A.D.) is also called the “Silver Age”. Despite the fact that no silver mine...
We present a high precision, minimally-destructive geochemical (lead isotope and trace element) anal...
Silver, Butter, Cloth advances current debates about the nature and complexity of Viking economic sy...
We present a high precision, minimally-destructive geochemical (lead isotope and trace element) anal...
The rich and long-lasting Nordic Bronze Age was dependent throughout on incoming flows of copper and...
The purpose with this work is to try and see an economic development on Gotland during the Viking Ag...
The late seventh century introduction of silver coinage marked a transformation in the economy of No...
This technological and provenance analysis of metal artifacts from a unique Viking-age hoard found i...
This second volume concerning the excavations in the Viking-period town Kaupang in 1998–2003 examine...
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological...
This chapter examines the use of silver as a medium of payment in the Early Viking Period. Kaupang h...
The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resourc...
The dissertation deals with the archaeological context of Baltic-zone silver hoards deposited in th...
Based on 550 metal analyses, this study sheds decisive light on how the Nordic Bronze Age was founde...
Hacksilber facilitated trade and transactions from the beginning of the second millennium BCE until ...
The Viking Age (800–1050 A.D.) is also called the “Silver Age”. Despite the fact that no silver mine...