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Silver lining: evidence for Inka silver refining in northern Chile
Authors:Colleen Zori  Peter Tropper
Institution:1. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles, 308 Charles E. Young Drive North, A201 Fowler Building, Box 951510, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA;2. Institute of Mineralogy and Petrography, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52f, Innsbruck A-6020, Austria
Abstract:Prehistoric silver purification using lead cupellation has been documented in multiple places throughout the Andes, but direct evidence of the Inka use of this technology has remained elusive. In this study, we use X-ray fluorescence, scanning electron microscopy, and electron-microprobe analysis to document direct evidence of Inka period (AD 1400–1532) silver purification using lead cupellation in the Tarapacá Valley of northern Chile. Local metalworkers used wind-driven huayra furnaces to produce pure lead metal, sustaining temperatures of ca. 900–1100 °C to smelt lead-bearing ores that may have included galena. The lead metal was then used in open-vessel cupellation of silver-bearing ores, some of which may have been cupriferous and derived from the nearby Inka mines at Huantajaya. Phase analyses of the slagged interiors of bowl-shaped ceramic vessels used for cupellation indicate that the metalworkers maintained the oxidizing environment and temperatures between 800 and 1100 °C requisite for cupellation. We argue that the Inka introduced this technique to Tarapacá metalworkers. The absence of finished silver artifacts in local valley contexts suggests that the refined silver was removed from the valley for use elsewhere in the empire.
Keywords:Inka  Archaeometallurgy  Silver  Cupellation  Tarapacá  Valley
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