International audienceEstimating global fluxes of precious metals is key to understanding early monetary systems. This work adds silver (Ag) to the metals (Pb and Cu) used so far to trace the provenance of coinage through variations in isotopic abundances. Silver, copper, and lead isotopes were measured in 91 coins from the East Mediterranean Antiquity and Roman world, medieval western Europe, 16th-18th century Spain, Mexico, and the Andes and show a great potential for provenance studies. Pre-1492 European silver can be distinguished from Mexican and Andean metal. European silver dominated Spanish coinage until Philip III, but had, 80 y later after the reign of Philip V, been flushed from the monetary mass and replaced by Mexican silver
Silver isotopes nowadays present a very fast evolving system. One of the field in which this isotopi...
The use of silver in south-eastern Iberia during the Bronze Age (c. 225o–145o cal BC) is conspicuous...
International audienceThe conventional approach to ore provenance studies of ancient silver coins an...
International audienceSilver played a key role in the progressive monetization of early Mediterranea...
The late seventh century introduction of silver coinage marked a transformation in the economy of No...
International audienceVariations of 109 Ag/ 107 Ag in silver coins and ores are particularly useful ...
International audienceThe reasons why the Western Mediterranean, especially Carthage and Rome, resis...
The circulation trading routes and the characterization of the silver metal used in the European con...
International audienceSilver played a major role in the progressive monetization of antique Mediterr...
This paper presents fresh interpretations of 160 lead isotope analyses of Archaic Greek coins on the...
Although silver coins have been investigated through the lens of geological provenance to locate arg...
Silver isotopes nowadays present a very fast evolving system. One of the field in which this isotopi...
The use of silver in south-eastern Iberia during the Bronze Age (c. 225o–145o cal BC) is conspicuous...
International audienceThe conventional approach to ore provenance studies of ancient silver coins an...
International audienceSilver played a key role in the progressive monetization of early Mediterranea...
The late seventh century introduction of silver coinage marked a transformation in the economy of No...
International audienceVariations of 109 Ag/ 107 Ag in silver coins and ores are particularly useful ...
International audienceThe reasons why the Western Mediterranean, especially Carthage and Rome, resis...
The circulation trading routes and the characterization of the silver metal used in the European con...
International audienceSilver played a major role in the progressive monetization of antique Mediterr...
This paper presents fresh interpretations of 160 lead isotope analyses of Archaic Greek coins on the...
Although silver coins have been investigated through the lens of geological provenance to locate arg...
Silver isotopes nowadays present a very fast evolving system. One of the field in which this isotopi...
The use of silver in south-eastern Iberia during the Bronze Age (c. 225o–145o cal BC) is conspicuous...
International audienceThe conventional approach to ore provenance studies of ancient silver coins an...