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Repealing the Çatalhöyük extractive metallurgy: The green, the fire and the ‘slag’

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Radivojevic, Miljana  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7329-305X
Rehren, T 
Farid, S 
Pernicka, E 
Camurcuoğlu, D 

Abstract

The scholarly quest for the origins of metallurgy has focused on a broad region from the Balkans to Central Asia, with different scholars advocating a single origin and multiple origins, respectively. One particular find has been controversially discussed as the potentially earliest known example of copper smelting in western Eurasia, a copper ‘slag’ piece from the Late Neolithic to Chalcolithic site of Çatalhöyük in central Turkey. Here we present a new assessment of metal making at Çatalhöyük based on the re-analysis of minerals, mineral artefacts and high-temperature materials excavated in the 1960s by J. Mellaart and first analysed by Neuninger, Pittioni and Siegl in 1964. This paper focuses on copper-based minerals, the alleged piece of metallurgical slag, and copper metal beads, and their contextual relationship to each other. It is based on new microstructural, compositional and isotopic analyses, and a careful re-examination of the fieldwork documentation and analytical data related to the c. 8500 years old high-temperature debris at Çatalhöyük. We re-interpret the sample identified earlier as metallurgical slag as incidentally fired green pigment, which was originally deposited in a burial and later affected by a destructive fire that also charred the bones of the interred body. We also re-confirm the contemporary metal beads as made from native metal. Our results provide a new and conclusive explanation of the previously contentious find, and reposition Çatalhöyük in a new narrative of the multiple origins of metallurgy in the Old World.

Description

Keywords

metallurgy, slag, copper minerals, pigments, Çatalhöyük, anatolia

Journal Title

Journal of Archaeological Science

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-4403
1095-9238

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
Qatar Foundation enabled the new study of this material through its generous funding of UCL Qatar as a joint centre of excellence for Museology, Conservation and Archaeology
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