1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910510404003321

Autore

André Guy

Titolo

On salt, copper and gold : The origins of early mining and metallurgy in the Caucasus / / Catherine Marro, Thomas Stöllner

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Lyon, : MOM Éditions, 2021

ISBN

2-35668-168-X

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (476 p.)

Collana

Archéologie(s)

Altri autori (Persone)

AstrucLaurence

AvetisyanPavel

BadalyanRuben

BakhshaliyevVeli

BălăşescuAdrian

BalasseMarie

BargeOlivier

BellefroidÉric

BerthonRémi

BitadzeLiana

BodeMichael

BoenkeNicole

ChahoudJwana

ChataignerChristine

CourcierAntoine

FiorilloDenis

FronteauGilles

GailhardNicolas

GambashidzeIrina

GiblinJulia

GononThierry

GratuzeBernard

GuilbeauDenis

GuliyevFarhad

HamonCaroline

HardingAnthony

HauptmannAndreas

HelwingBarbara

HerrscherEstelle

HovsepyanRoman

JalilovBakhtiyar

JansenMoritz

KalantaryanIrena

KirchnerDirk

KleinFelix



KleinSabine

LongfordCatherine

LyonnetBertille

MarroCatherine

MeliksetianKhachatur

NezafatiNima

OstaptchoukSonia

OtchvaniNino

PalumbiGiulio

PernickaErnst

Poulmarc’hModwene

SagonaAntonio

SchochWerner H

SenczekSebastian

StöllnerThomas

TamazashviliKetevan

ThomalskyJudith

VanishviliNikoloz

VarolBaki

Soggetti

Archaeology

mines

métallurgie

pastoralisme

mobilité

rituel

sel

cuivre

or

Caucase

Iran

Chalcolithique

Bronze ancien

mining

metallurgy

pastoralism

mobility

ritual

salt

copper

gold

Caucasus

Chalcolithic

Early Bronze Age



Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Sommario/riassunto

An international conference focused on the beginnings of mining and metallurgy in the Caucasus was organised in Tbilisi in June 16th-19th 2016 under the auspices of the National Museum of Georgia. This conference, which was funded by the Agence nationale de la recherche (France) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany), aimed at discussing the intricate relationships between the emergence of mining and metallurgy, and the shaping of late prehistoric societies in south-western Asia. The Caucasus is renowned in Near Eastern archaeology for its wealth in natural resources, in particular in metal ores: for decades, scholars have surmised a specific causal relationships between the rise of complex, hierarchical societies in the Near‑East and the development of extractive metallurgy. Metallurgy, however, is only the most visible part of the story that accounts for the dramatic changes perceptible in south‑western Asia in the course of the 5th millennium BCE. Early mining, which is not restricted to metal-ore mining, certainly also had an impact in terms of economic networks, social dynamics, settlement patterns and regional integration, not only across the Caucasus, but also in the ancient Near and Middle East. Drawing on these fundamental questions, this book explores the socio-economic, technological and environmental background that favoured the rise of systematic mining and extractive metallurgy in the Caucasus at the end of the Chalcolithic. How far was early mining linked to the spread of specific subsistence strategies such as pastoral herding? Were mined resources mainly intended for local consumption or distributed throughout the Near East, towards Anatolia, Iran or Mesopotamia? Here are some of the issues that are discussed in the present volume, which contains 21 articles written by some of the most eminent specialists in Caucasian archaeology.  Un colloque international axé sur les origines de l’extraction minière et de la métallurgie dans le Caucase…