International audienceRecent research on the organisation of copper production tends to show that metallurgy has rarely developed on a simple and linear manner but rather along quite tortuous paths. A team of Chilean and French archaeologists, archaeometallurgists, and geologists are currently comparing different social and technological contexts surrounding the emergence and/or development of various copper metallurgies including domestic and large-scale types of productions
International audienceDuring the late Neolithic – at the limit of the 4th and 3rd millennia BC – cop...
The regions of Southwest Asia during the Late Chalcolithic and Bronze Age were inextricably linked t...
The development of early Bronze metallurgy is interpreted as part of Neolithic prestige good economi...
International audienceRecent research on the organisation of copper production tends to show that m...
International audienceIn the Early Bronze Age copper production increases dramatically, yet in Weste...
The paper reviews the archaeometallurgical evidence available for the site of Saint-Véran, Hautes A...
Studies of metal production frequently show a correlation between scale and organizational complexit...
Debates on early metallurgy in Western Europe have frequently focused on the social value of copper ...
Debates on early metallurgy in Western Europe have frequently focused on the social value of copper ...
International audienceAt the turn of the second millennium BC in Europe, the development of copper a...
Employing a technological approach derived from the ‘Anthropology of Technology’ theoretical literat...
Employing a technological approach derived from the 'Anthropology of Technology' theoretical literat...
Many of the arguments for how and why people began to use iron in Southwest Asia rely on assumptions...
International audienceDuring the late Neolithic – at the limit of the 4th and 3rd millennia BC – cop...
The regions of Southwest Asia during the Late Chalcolithic and Bronze Age were inextricably linked t...
The development of early Bronze metallurgy is interpreted as part of Neolithic prestige good economi...
International audienceRecent research on the organisation of copper production tends to show that m...
International audienceIn the Early Bronze Age copper production increases dramatically, yet in Weste...
The paper reviews the archaeometallurgical evidence available for the site of Saint-Véran, Hautes A...
Studies of metal production frequently show a correlation between scale and organizational complexit...
Debates on early metallurgy in Western Europe have frequently focused on the social value of copper ...
Debates on early metallurgy in Western Europe have frequently focused on the social value of copper ...
International audienceAt the turn of the second millennium BC in Europe, the development of copper a...
Employing a technological approach derived from the ‘Anthropology of Technology’ theoretical literat...
Employing a technological approach derived from the 'Anthropology of Technology' theoretical literat...
Many of the arguments for how and why people began to use iron in Southwest Asia rely on assumptions...
International audienceDuring the late Neolithic – at the limit of the 4th and 3rd millennia BC – cop...
The regions of Southwest Asia during the Late Chalcolithic and Bronze Age were inextricably linked t...
The development of early Bronze metallurgy is interpreted as part of Neolithic prestige good economi...