Abstract
The earliest metal objects and metal production practices appeared in Western Europe during the fourth and third millennia BC. The presence of earlier dates for copper, gold, silver, and lead, as well as arsenical copper and tin-bronze alloys in Central and Eastern Europe implies that there is no evidence for the independent invention of metallurgy in Western Europe. Instead, the acquisition of metal objects as exotica by communities appears to have led eventually to the movement of people possessing metallurgical expertise. However, the metals, production techniques and object forms used in each region reflect local standards seen in other materials. This implies a process of incorporation and innovation by the communities involved rather than a straightforward or inevitable adoption. The presence of metal may have created new networks of communication and exchange but, due to its small scale, there is no evidence for any metallurgical revolution.
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Acknowledgments
This paper arises out of my doctoral research at Cambridge University supervised by Marie-Louise Stig-Sørensen and Barbara Ottaway and funded by the Domestic Research Studentship. Cate Frieman, Stuart Needham, Jo Sofaer, and Chris Thornton were integral to its final form though I have benefited immensely from conversations with many other scholars. The errors and opinions remain my own.
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Roberts, B.W. Production Networks and Consumer Choice in the Earliest Metal of Western Europe. J World Prehist 22, 461–481 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10963-009-9027-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10963-009-9027-1