Lead isotopic compositions link copper axes from Kietrz (Poland, 3500–3350 BC) to Slovak and Balkan copper mines

Author:

Kowalski Łukasz1ORCID,Stos‐Gale Zofia Anna2,Adamczak Kamil1,Maas Roland3,Woodhead Jon3,Garbacz‐Klempka Aldona4,Kozicka Magdalena1,Kofel Dominika5,Matuszczyk Ewa6

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Applied Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń Toruń Poland

2. Department of Historical Studies University of Gothenburg Göteborg Sweden

3. School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

4. Historical Layers Research Centre, Faculty of Foundry Engineering AGH University of Science and Technology Kraków Poland

5. Institute of Archaeology Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń Toruń Poland

6. Museum of Opole Silesia Opole Poland

Abstract

AbstractChemical and lead isotope analyses aided by metallographic examination of copper axes found at the Late Neolithic settlement of Kietrz in southwestern Poland provide new evidence for the origin of copper and metal trade routes in the region. Our results indicate that metal used for the axes could be sourced from copper mines in modern Slovakia, Bulgaria and perhaps Serbia. The evidence from this study confirms that the Funnel Beaker people from Poland became parties to a metal trading network that connected much of continental Europe in the mid‐4th millennium bce and provides a better understanding of how these contacts provided the background for the technological and socio‐economic developments of the Baden era.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,History

Reference61 articles.

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2. Chemical and isotopic tracers in alpine copper deposits: Geochemical links between mines and metal;Artioli G.;Geo. Alp,2008

3. LIA of Prehistoric Metals in the Central Mediterranean Area: A Review

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