What is an Ore Deposit? Approaches from Geoscience and Archaeology in Understanding the Usage of Deposits

Authors

  • Thomas Stöllner Deutsches Bergbau-Museum Bochum, Research Division / Ruhr University Bochum, Institute of Archaeological Studies, Am Bergbaumuseum 31, 44791 Bochum

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46586/metalla.v24.2018.i2.87-110

Keywords:

Mining archaeology, ore geology, ore deposits, mineralogy, metal ages, alloys

Abstract

Metallogenic ore deposits can be construed and understood in different ways: it is easy for archaeologists and historians to  oversimplify the mineralogical complexity of an ore deposit when conceptualising deposits as deliverers of raw materials such as copper or gold. Deposits are most of the time not monometallic; rather they are a mixture of various minerals that can  significantly influence the metallic end products. Provenance data are often critically discussed on the basis of the explanatory value of ore mineralogy; however, archaeometallurgists may describe the complex mineralogical and chemical composition on a highly detailed level, disregarding the question of relevancy to the understanding of early societies, who tended to understand their environment on more empirical and practical levels. Archaeological theories are too often developed without regarding the specific quality of archaeometrical record, which needs detailed discussion about its quality and information value. Intense communication and close cooperation of specialists from diverse academic and scientific backgrounds are key in taking the study of metal resources forward. 

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Published

2019-07-26

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Section

Articles