Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T16:35:58.951Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

7 - Metalworking in Pre-Islamic North Africa

A View from the Garamantian Oases

from Part III - Metallurgy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2020

C. N. Duckworth
Affiliation:
University of Newcastle upon Tyne
A. Cuénod
Affiliation:
University of Leicester
D. J. Mattingly
Affiliation:
University of Leicester
Get access

Summary

This chapter first reviews the evidence for metal and metalworking recovered in Fazzan (Libyan Sahara) and presents the results of an analytical program carried out by the Trans-SAHARA Project. This evidence is then considered in relation to other Saharan, North African and West African sites dating from a similar period. The Garamantes seem to have used both copper alloys and iron for ornamental as well as utilitarian purposes. Chemical analysis of the copper-base fragments indicates that at least part of the metal was imported from the Roman world. However, the recovery at Garamantian sites of a certain amount of metalworking debris (slag, hearths and ingot moulds) dating to the second half of the first millennium BC to the beginning of the first millennium AD, shows that metal was also worked and transformed in the oases. Moreover, evidence for trade and possible shared technological choices between Fazzan and sites on the southern edge of the desert is starting to emerge. These choices would have been influenced by environmental constraints such as the scarcity of fuel and copper ores and impacted by the entanglement of metallurgy with other technologies such as agriculture.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alpern, S.B. 2005. Did they or didn’t they invent it? Iron in Sub-Saharan Africa. History in Africa 32: 4194.Google Scholar
Baron, S., Carignan, J., Laurent, S. and Ploquin, A. 2006. Medieval lead making on Mont-Lozère Massif (Cévennes-France): Tracing ore sources using Pb isotopes. Applied Geochemistry 21: 241–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barth, H. 1858 [1890]. Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa. London: Ward, Lock and Co.Google Scholar
Bayley, J. 1998. The production of brass in antiquity with particular reference to Roman Britain. In Craddock, P.T. (ed.), 2000 Years of Zinc and Brass, London: British Museum, 726.Google Scholar
Bedaux, R.M., Constandse-Westermann, T.S., Hacquebord, L., Lange, A.G. and Van der Waals, J.D. 1978. Recherches archéologiques dans le Delta Intérieur du Niger (Mali). Palaeohistoria Bussum 20: 91220.Google Scholar
Bode, M., Hauptmann, A. and Mezger, K. 2009. Tracing Roman lead sources using lead isotope analyses in conjunction with archaeological and epigraphic evidence – a case study from Augustan/Tiberian Germania. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 1: 177–94.Google Scholar
Boni, M. and Koeppel, V. 1985. Ore-lead isotope pattern from the Iglesiente-Sulcis Area (SW Sardinia) and the problem of remobilization of metals. Mineralium Deposita 20.3: 185–93.Google Scholar
Boube-Piccot, C. 1995. Bronzes antiques: Productions et importations au Maroc. In Trousset, P (ed.), L’Afrique du Nord Antique et Médiévale: Productions et Exportations Africaines. Actualités archéologiques, Paris: Editions du CTHS, 6578.Google Scholar
Bourhis, J.-R. 1983. Résultats des analyses d’objets en cuivre, bronze, laiton et des résidus de métallurgie antique d’Afrique. In Echard 1983, 127–52.Google Scholar
Chardron-Picault, P. and Picon, M. 1998. La fabrication du laiton à Autun, durant la période romaine: Premières recherches. Mémoires de la Société Eduenne 56.2: 171–81.Google Scholar
Childs, S.T. and Killick, D. 1993. Indigenous African metallurgy: Nature and culture. Annual Review of Anthropology 22: 317–37.Google Scholar
Chirikure, S. 2010. On evidence, ideas and fantasy: The origins of iron in Sub-Saharan Africa. Thoughts on É. Zangato and A.F.C. Holl’s ‘On the Iron Front’. Journal of African Archaeology 8.1: 2528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cissé, M. 2010. Archaeological Investigations of Early Trade and Urbanism at Gao Saney (Mali). Unpublished PhD thesis, Rice University, Houston.Google Scholar
Cline, W.B. 1937. Mining and Metallurgy in Negro Africa. Menasha: Gorge Banta Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Clist, B. 2012. Vers une réduction des préjugés et la fonte des antagonismes: Un bilan de l’expansion de la métallurgie du fer en Afrique sub-saharienne. Journal of African Archaeology 10.1: 7184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, F. 2013a. Small finds reports and catalogue of small finds. In Mattingly 2013, 455–72.Google Scholar
Cole, F. 2013b. Catalogue of small finds. In Mattingly 2013, 793840.Google Scholar
Craddock, P.T. 1978. The composition of the copper alloys used by the Greek, Etruscan and Roman civilizations: 3. The origins and early use of brass. Journal of Archaeological Science 5.1: 116.Google Scholar
Craddock, P.T. 1985. Medieval copper alloy production and West African bronze analyses – Part I. Archaeometry 27: 1741.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craddock, P.T. 2010. New paradigms for old iron: Thoughts on É. Zangato A.F.C. Holl’s ‘On the Iron Front’. Journal of African Archaeology 8.1: 2936.Google Scholar
Craddock, P.T. and Eckstein, K. 2003. Production of brass in antiquity by direct reduction. In Craddock, P.T. and Lang, J (eds), Mining and Metal Production through the Ages, London: The British Museum Press, 216–30.Google Scholar
Daniels, C.M. 1968. Garamantian excavations: Zinchecra 1965–67. Libya Antiqua 5: 113–94.Google Scholar
Dayton, J.E. and Dayton, A. 1986. Use and limitations of lead isotopes in archaeology. In Olin, J.S. and Blackman, M.J. (eds), Proceedings of the 24th International Archaeometry Symposium, Smithsonian, Washington, DC, May 14–18, 1984, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1342.Google Scholar
Deme, A. and McIntosh, S.K. 2006. Excavations at Walaldé: New light on the settlement of the Middle Senegal Valley by iron-using peoples. Journal of African Archaeology 4.2: 317–47.Google Scholar
Desbat, A., Meille, E. and Picon, M. 2000. La préparation du laiton par cémentation, à l’époque romaine. In Pétrequin, P, Fluzin, P, Thiriot, J and Benoit, P (eds), Arts du Feu et Productions Artisanales: Actes des XXe Rencontres Internationales d’Archéologie et d’Histoire d’Antibes, 21–23 oct. 1999, Antibes: Éditions APDCA, 183–88.Google Scholar
Descoeudres, J.-P., Huysecom, E., Serneels, V. and Zimmermann, J.-L. (eds) 2001. The Origins of Iron Metallurgy: Proceedings of the First International Colloquium on the Archaeology of Africa and the Mediterranean Basin. Mediterranean Archaeology 14. Sydney: University of Sydney.Google Scholar
Domergue, C. and Rico, C. 2014. Les itinéraires du commerce du cuivre et du plomb hispaniques à l’époque romaine dans le monde méditerranéen. In La Corse et le Monde Méditerranéen, des Origines au Moyen Ag : Echanges et Circuits Commerciaux. Actes du colloque de Bastia, 21–22 novembre 2013. Bulletin de la Société des sciences historiques et naturelles de la Corse 746–47: 135–68, Bastia: Société des Sciences Historiques et Naturelles de la Corse.Google Scholar
Domergue, C., Serneels, V., Cauuet, B., Pailler, J.-M. and Orzechowski, S. 2006. Mines et métallurgies en Gaule à la fin de l’âge du Fer et à l’époque romaine. In Paunier, D (ed.), Celtes et Gaulois, l’Archéologie face à l’Histoire, 5: la Romanisation et la Question de l’Héritage Celtique, Glux-en-Glenne: Bibracte, Centre archéologique européen, 131–62.Google Scholar
Duckworth, C.N., Cuénod, A. and Mattingly, D.J. 2015. Non-destructive μXRF analysis of glass and metal objects from sites in the Libyan Pre-Desert and Fazzan. Libyan Studies 46: 1534.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dungworth, D. and Mepham, L. 2012. Prehistoric iron smelting in London: Evidence from Shooters Hill. Historical Metallurgy 46: 18.Google Scholar
Durali-Müller, S., Brey, G.P., Wigg-Wolf, D. and Lahaye, Y. 2007. Roman lead mining in Germany: Its origin and development through time deduced from lead isotope provenance studies. Journal of Archaeological Science 34: 1555–67.Google Scholar
Echard, N. (ed.) 1983. Métallurgies Africaines: Nouvelles contributions. Mémoires de la Société des Africanistes 9. Paris: Société des Africanistes.Google Scholar
Eggert, M. 2010. Too old? Remarks on new evidence of ironworking in north-central Africa. Journal of African Archaeology 8.1: 3738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farquhar, R.M. and Vitali, V. 2009. Lead Isotope Analyses of Punic and Roman Artifacts. Unpublished report. Toronto: Geophysics Laboratory, University of Toronto.Google Scholar
Fenn, T. 2006. Copper metallurgy and Trans-Saharan commerce: Report on summer 2006 field research in the western Agadez region, central Niger. Nyame Akuma 66: 2534.Google Scholar
Fenn, T.R., Killick, D.J., Chesley, J., Magnavita, S. and Ruiz, J. 2009. Contacts between West Africa and Roman North Africa: Archaeometallurgical results from Kissi, northeastern Burkina Faso. In S. Magnavita et al. (eds), Crossroads Carrrefour/Sahel: Cultural and Technological Developments in the First Millennium BC/AD West Africa, Frankfurt: Africa Magna Verlag, 119–46.Google Scholar
Gale, N.H. and Stos-Gale, Z.A. 1996. Lead isotope methodology: The possible fractionation of lead isotope compositions during metallurgical processes. In Demirci, S, Ozer, A.M. and Summers, G.D. (eds), Archaeometry 94: The Proceedings of the 29th International Symposium on Archaeometry, Ankara: Tubitak, 287–99.Google Scholar
Garenne-Marot, L., Wayman, M.L. and Pigott, V.C. 1994. Early copper and brass in Senegal. In Childs, T (ed.), Society, Culture and Technology in Africa, MASCA Research Papers in Science and Archaeology, Supplement to Volume 11, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum, 4562.Google Scholar
Gechter, M. 1993. Römischer Bergbau in der Germania Inferior: Eine Bestandaufnahme. In Steuer, H and Zimmermann, U (eds), Montanarchäologie in Europa, Sigmaringen: Jan Thorbecke, 161–66.Google Scholar
Gibbins, H. 1991. Lead Isotope Analyses of Artifacts from Carthage and Roccagloriosa. Unpublished report. Edmonton: Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Alberta.Google Scholar
Gida, G. and Vidale, M. 2006. Analytical observations on some iron finds. In Liverani 2006, 323–26.Google Scholar
Grébénart, D. 1983. Les métallurgies du cuivre et du fer autour d’Agadez (Niger), des origines au début de la période médiévale. In Echard 1983, 109–25.Google Scholar
Hawthorne, J., Mattingly, D.J. and Daniels, C.M., with contributions by Barnett, T., Dore, J.N. and Leone, A. 2010. Zinkekra: an Early Garamantian escarpment settlement and associated sites (ZIN001–003). In Mattingly 2010, 1984.Google Scholar
Herbert, E.W. 1984. Red Gold of Africa: Copper in Precolonial History and Culture. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Herbert, E.W. 2001. African metallurgy: The historian’s dilemma. In Descoeudres et al. 2001, 4148.Google Scholar
Holl, A.F. 2009. Early West African metallurgies: New data and old orthodoxy. Journal of World Prehistory 22.4: 415–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Junius, H. 2016. Nok early iron production in Central Nigeria: New finds and features. Journal of African Archaeology 14.3: 291311.Google Scholar
Kaufman, B. 2014. Empire without a Voice: Phoenician Iron Metallurgy and Imperial Strategy at Carthage. Unpublished PhD thesis. Los Angeles: University of California.Google Scholar
Killick, D. 2004. Review essay: What do we know about African iron working? Journal of African Archaeology 2.1: 97112.Google Scholar
Killick, D. 2009. Cairo to Cape: The spread of metallurgy through eastern and southern Africa. Journal of World Prehistory 22.4: 399414.Google Scholar
Killick, D. 2015. Invention and innovation in African iron-smelting. Cambridge Archaeology Journal 25.1: 307–19.Google Scholar
Killick, D., Van der Merwe, N.J., Gordon, R.B. and Grébénart, D. 1988. Reassessment of the evidence for early metallurgy in Niger, West Africa. Journal of Archaeological Science 15: 367–94.Google Scholar
Klein, S., Lahaye, Y., Brey, G.P. and von Kaenel, H.-M. 2004. The early Roman imperial aes coinage II: Tracing the copper sources by analysis of lead and copper isotopes – copper coins of Augustus and Tiberius. Archaeometry 46.3: 469–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, S., Domergue, C., Lahaye, Y., Brey, G.P. and von Kaenel, H.-M. 2009. The lead and copper isotopic composition of copper ores from the Sierra Morena (Spain). Journal of Iberian Geology 35.1: 5968.Google Scholar
Lambert, N. 1983. Nouvelle contribution à l’étude du Chalcolithique de Mauritanie. In Echard 1983, 6387.Google Scholar
La Niece, S., Hook, D.R. and Craddock, P.T. (eds) 2007. Metals and Mines: Studies in Archaeometallurgy. London: Archetype Publications in association with the British Museum, 148–58.Google Scholar
Le Guen, M., Orgeval, J.-J. and Lancelot, J. 1991. Lead isotope behaviour in a polyphased Pb-Zn ore deposit: Les Malines (Cévennes, France). Mineralium Deposita 26: 180–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leitch, V., Duckworth, C., Cuénod, A., Mattingly, D.J., Sterry, M. and Cole, F. 2017. Early Saharan trade: The inorganic evidence. In Mattingly et al. 2017, 287340.Google Scholar
Lemorini, C. and Cristiani, E. 2006. Functional analysis of abraded heavy duty tools. In Liverani 2006, 295308.Google Scholar
Lhote, H. 1952. La connaissance du fer en Afrique occidentale. Encyclopédie Mensuelle d’Outre-Mer 1.25: 269–72.Google Scholar
Liverani, M. (ed.) 2006. Aghram Nadharif: The Barkat Oasis (Sha’abiya of Ghat, Libyan Sahara) in Garamantian Times. Arid Zone Archaeology Monographs 5. Florence: All’Insegna del Giglio.Google Scholar
Livingstone Smith, A. 2007. Histoire du décor à la roulette en Afrique subsaharienne. Journal of African Archaeology 5.2: 189216.Google Scholar
Ludwig, K.R., Vollmer, R., Turi, B., Simmons, K.R. and Perna, G. 1989. Isotopic constraints on the genesis of base-metal ores in southern and central Sardinia. European Journal of Mineralogy 1.5: 657–66.Google Scholar
MacDonald, K.C., Vernet, R., Martinón-Torres, M. and Fuller, D.Q. 2009. Dhar Néma: From early agriculture to metallurgy in southeastern Mauritania. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 44.1: 348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacEachern, S. 1996. Iron Age beginnings north of the Mandara Mountains, Cameroon and Nigeria. In Pwiti, G and Soper, R (eds), Aspects of African Archaeology: Papers from the 10th Congress of the Pan African Association for Prehistory and Related Studies, Harare: University of Zimbabwe Publications, 489–95.Google Scholar
MacEachern, S. 1998. Scale, style, and cultural variation: Technological traditions in the Northern Mandara mountains. In Stark, M.T. (ed.), The Archaeology of Social Boundaries, Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press, 107–31.Google Scholar
MacEachern, S. 2010. Thoughts on É. Zangato and A.F.C. Holl’s ‘On the Iron Front’. Journal of African Archaeology 8.1: 3941.Google Scholar
Magnavita, S. 2017. Track and trace: Archaeometric approaches to the study of early Trans-Saharan trade. In Mattingly et al. 2017, 393413.Google Scholar
Magnavita, S., Maga, A., Magnavita, C. and Idé, O.A. 2007. New studies on Marandet (central Niger) and its trade connections: An interim report. Zeitschrift für Archäologie Außereuropäischer Kulturen 2: 147–65.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J. (ed.) 2007. The Archaeology of Fazzan. Volume 2, Site Gazetteer, Pottery and Other Survey Finds. London: Society for Libyan Studies, Department of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J. (ed.) 2010. The Archaeology of Fazzan. Volume 3, Excavations carried out by C.M. Daniels. London: Society for Libyan Studies, Department of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J. (ed.) 2013. The Archaeology of Fazzan. Volume 4, Survey and Excavations at Old Jarma (Ancient Garama) carried out by C.M. Daniels (1962–69) and the Fazzan Project (1997–2001). London: Society for Libyan Studies, Department of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J., Lahr, M., Armitage, S., Barton, H., Dore, J., Drake, N., Foley, R., Merlo, S., Salem, M., Stock, J. and White, K. 2007. Desert migrations: People, environment and culture in the Libyan Sahara. Libyan Studies 38: 115–56.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J., Leitch, V., Duckworth, C.N., Cuenod, A., Sterry, M. and Cole, F. (eds) 2017. Trade in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond. Trans-Saharan Archaeology, Volume 1. Series editor Mattingly, D.J. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D.J., Gatto, M., Ray, N. and Sterry, M. 2019. Dying to be Garamantian: Burial and migration in Fazzan. In Carmelo Gatto, M, Mattingly, D.J., Ray, N and Sterry, M (eds), Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond. Trans-Saharan Archaeology, Volume 2. Series editor Mattingly, D.J.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press and the Society for Libyan Studies, 51107.Google Scholar
Mauny, R. 1952. Essai sur l’histoire des métaux en Afrique occidentale. Bulletin de l’IFAN 14.2: 545–95.Google Scholar
McIntosh, S.K. 1994. Changing perceptions of West Africa’s past: Archaeological research since 1988. Journal of Archaeological Research 2.2: 165–98.Google Scholar
McIntosh, S.K. 1995. Excavations at Jenné-Jeno, Hambarketolo, and Kaniana (Inland Niger Delta, Mali), the 1981 Season. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
McIntosh, S.K. 2005. Archaeology and the reconstruction of the African past. In Philips, J.E. (ed.), Writing African History, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 5185.Google Scholar
McIntosh, S.K. 2020. Long-distance exchange and urban trajectories in the first millennium AD: Case studies from the Middle Niger and Middle Senegal River valleys. In Sterry, M and D.J. Mattingly (eds), Urbanisation and State Formation in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond, Trans-Saharan Archaeology, Volume 3, series editor D.J. Mattingly, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 521–63.Google Scholar
Miller, D. and Killick, D. 2004. Slag identification at southern African archaeological sites. Journal of African Archaeology 2.1: 2347.Google Scholar
Mori, L. (ed.) 2013a. Life and Death of a Rural Village in Garamantian Times: Archaeological Investigations in the Fewet oasis (Libyan Sahara). Arid Zone Archaeology Monographs 6. Firenze: All’Insegna del Giglio.Google Scholar
Mori, L. 2013b. The survey in the Tan Ataram area. In Mori 2013a, 7178.Google Scholar
Mori, L., Gatto, M.C. and Ottomano, C. 2013. Excavations and soundings at Tan Afella. In Mori 2013a, 3070.Google Scholar
Niemeyer, H.G. 1990. A la recherche de la Carthage archaïque: Premiers résultats des fouilles de l’Université de Hambourg en 1986 et 1987. In Carthage et son Territoire dans l’Antiquité, Actes du IVe colloque international sur l’histoire et l’archéologie de l’Afrique du Nord réuni dans le cadre du 113e Congrès national des Sociétés savants, Strasbourg, 5–9 avril 1988. Paris: CTHS, 4552.Google Scholar
Nixon, S. 2009. Excavating Essouk-Tadmakka (Mali): New archaeological investigations of Early Islamic Trans-Saharan trade. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 44.2: 217–55.Google Scholar
Ogden, J. 2000. Metals. In Nicholson, P and Shaw, I (eds), Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 146–76.Google Scholar
Okafor, E.E. 2002. La réduction du fer dans les Bas-Fourneaux – Une industrie vieille de 2500 ans au Nigeria. In Bocoum, H (ed.), Aux origines de la métallurgie du fer en Afrique, Paris: Editions UNESCO, 3548.Google Scholar
Paris, F., Person, A., Quéchon, G. and Saliège, J.-F. 1992. Les débuts de la métallurgie au Niger septentrional. Journal des Africanistes 62.2: 5568.Google Scholar
Pelling, R. 2013. The archaeobotanical remains. In Mattingly 2013, 473–94.Google Scholar
Phillipson, D.W. 2005. African Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Picon, M., Le Nezet-Celestin, M. and Desbat, A. 1995. Un type particulier de grands récipients en terre réfractaire utilisés pour la fabrication du laiton par cémentation. In Rivet, L (ed.), Actes du Congrès de Rouen, Marseille: Société Française d’Etude de la Céramique Antique en Gaule.Google Scholar
Pigott, V.C. (ed.) 1999. The Archaeometallurgy of the Asian Old World. University Museum Monograph 16/MASCA Research Papers in Science and Archaeology 16. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Pollard, A.M., Bray, P., Gosden, C., Wilson, A. and Hamerow, H. 2015. Characterising copper based metals in Britain in the first millennium AD: A preliminary quantification of metal flow and recycling. Antiquity 89.345: 697713.Google Scholar
Pringle, H. 2009. Seeking Africa’s first iron men. Science 323.5911: 200–2.Google Scholar
Quéchon, G. 2001. Les datations de la métallurgie du fer à Termit (Niger): Leur fiabilité, leur signification. In Descoeudres et al. 2001, 247–53.Google Scholar
Rakob, F. 1990. La Carthage archaïque. In Carthage et son territoire dans l’Antiquité, Actes du IVe colloque international sur l’histoire et l’archéologie de l’Afrique du Nord réuni dans le cadre du 113e Congrès national des Sociétés savants, Strasbourg, 5–9 avril 1988. Paris: CTHS, 3143.Google Scholar
Rehder, J. 2000. Mastery and Uses of Fire in Antiquity. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.Google Scholar
Rehren, Th. 1999. Small size, large scale Roman brass production in Germania Inferior. Journal of Archaeological Science 26.8: 1083–87.Google Scholar
Rehren, Th., Charlton, M., Chirikure, S., Humphris, J., Ige, A. and Veldhuijzen, H.A. 2007. Decisions set in slag: The human factor in African iron smelting. In La Niece et al. 2007, 211–18.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Blackwell, P.G., Bronk Ramsey, C., Grootes, P.M., Guilderson, T.P., Haflidason, H., Hajdas, I., Hattž, C., Heaton, T.J., Hoffmann, D.L., Hogg, A.G., Hughen, K.A., Kaiser, K.F., Kromer, B., Manning, S.W., Niu, M., Reimer, R.W., Richards, D.A., Scott, E.M., Southon, J.R., Staff, R.A., Turney, C.S.M. and Van der Plicht, J. 2013. IntCal13 and Marine13 Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curves 0–50,000 Years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55.4: 1869–87.Google Scholar
Rico, C., Domergue, C., Rauzier, M., Klein, S., Lahaye, Y., Brey, G. and von Kaenel, H.-M. 2005. La provenance des lingots de cuivre romains de Maguelone (Hérault, France). Étude archéologique et archéométrique. Revue Archéologique de Narbonnaise 38.1: 459–72.Google Scholar
Rohl, B.M. 1996. Lead isotope data from the Isotrace Laboratory, Oxford: Archaeometry data base 2, galena from Britain and Ireland. Archaeometry 38.1: 165–80.Google Scholar
Sanmarti, J., Kallala, N., Carme Belarte, M., Ramon, J., Telmini, B.M., Jornet, R. and Miniaoui, S. 2012. Filling gaps in the protohistory of the eastern Maghreb: The Althiburos Archaeological Project (El Kef, Tunisia). Journal of African Archaeology 10.1: 2144.Google Scholar
Santos Zalduegui, J.F., Garcia de Madinabeitia, S., Gil Ibarguchi, J.I. and Palero, F. 2004. A lead isotope database: The Los Pedroches – Alcudia area (Spain): Implications for archaeometallurgical connections across southwestern and southeastern Iberia. Archaeometry 46.4: 625–34.Google Scholar
Sauer, E. 2007. Fazzan Project survey small finds reports: The coins. In Mattingly 2007, 463–64.Google Scholar
Scheele, J. 2017. The need for nomads: Camel-herding, raiding, and Saharan trade and settlement. In Mattingly et al. 2017, 5579.Google Scholar
Schmidt, A. 2005. 7.2 Métaux. In Bedaux, R, Polet, J, Sanogo, K and Schmidt, A (eds), Recherches Archéologiques à Dia dans le Delta intérieur du Niger (Mali): Bilan des Saisons de Fouilles 1998–2003, Leiden: CNWS Publications, 257–62.Google Scholar
Schrüfer-Kolb, I. 2007. Metallurgical and non-metallurgical industrial activities. In Mattingly 2007, 448–62.Google Scholar
Shaw, T. 1970. Igbo-Ukwu: An Account of Archaeological Discoveries in Eastern Nigeria. London: Faber and Faber.Google Scholar
Skaggs, S., Norman, N., Garrison, E., Coleman, D. and Bouhlel, S. 2012. Local mining or lead importation in the Roman province of Africa Proconsularis? Lead isotope analysis of curse tablets from Roman Carthage, Tunisia. Journal of Archaeological Science 39: 970–83.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, Z., Gale, N.H., Houghton, J. and Speakman, R. 1995. Lead isotope data from the Isotrace Laboratory, Oxford: Archaeometry data base 1, ores from the western Mediterranean. Archaeometry 37.2: 407–15.Google Scholar
Swainbank, I.G., Shepherd, T.J., Caboi, R. and Massoli-Novelli, R. 1982. Lead isotopic composition of some galena ores from Sardinia. Periodico di Mineralogia 51: 275–86.Google Scholar
Tekki, A. 2009. Recherches sur la métallurgie punique, notamment les objets en alliages à base de cuivre à Carthage. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Université de Provence.Google Scholar
Vanacker, C. 1983. Cuivre et métallurgie du cuivre à Tegdaoust (Mauritanie Orientale). Découvertes et problèmes. In Echard 1983, 89107.Google Scholar
Vernet, R. 1993. Préhistoire de la Mauritanie. Nouakchott: Sépia.Google Scholar
Weisgerber, G., with contributions by Craddock, P.T. and Meeks, N.D., Baumer, U. and Koller, J. 2007. Roman brass and lead ingots from the western Mediterranean. In La Niece et al. 2007, 148–58.Google Scholar
Willett, F. and Sayre, E.V. 2006. Lead isotopes in West African copper alloys. Journal of African Archaeology 4.1: 5590.Google Scholar
Wuttmann, M. 2001. La métallurgie du fer dans l’Egypte ancienne: Les données de l’archéologie. In Descoeudres et al. 2001, 205–07.Google Scholar
Zangato, É. 2007. Les Ateliers d’Oboui: Premières communautés métallurgistes dans le Nord-Ouest du Centrafrique. Paris: Editions Recherches sur les Civilisations.Google Scholar
Zangato, É. and Holl, A.F.C. 2010. On the iron front: New evidence from north-central Africa. Journal of African Archaeology 8.1: 723.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×