Journal
ANTIQUITY
Volume 91, Issue 357, Pages 674-687Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2017.45
Keywords
China; Bronze Age; metal chemistry; flame; network
Categories
Funding
- Hastings Senior Scholarship
- Oxford University Press John Fell Fund
- Leverhulme Trust [F/08 622/D, F/08 735/G]
- China Oxford Scholarship Fund
- Santander travelling fund
- Reed Foundation
- European Research Council Advanced Grant [1300505]
- Oxford Clarendon DPhil scholarship
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The Shang (c. 1500-1045 BC) and Zhou dynasties (c. 1045-771 BC) of China are famous for their sophisticated ritual bronze vessels. Sourcing the leaded tin-bronze has, however, proved to be a challenge. A new systematic approach to metal chemistry uses trace elements and isotopes to characterise the underlying circulation pattern. It reveals the complexity of the copper sources on which the late Shang capital at Anyang depended for its bronzes, suggesting the transport of copper from distant regions in the south, on the Yangtze, and from north-east China. The new interpretational system furthers our understanding of the network on which successive Chinese dynasties depended for copper, lead and tin, and attempts to give equal weight to the archaeological and chemical data.
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