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Metallurgical traditions and metal exchange networks in late prehistoric central Myanmar,c. 1000 BC to c. AD 500
Authors:Thomas Oliver Pryce  Kalayar Myat Myat Htwe  Myrto Georgakopoulou  Tiffany Martin  Enrique Vega  Thilo Rehren  Tin Tin Win  Thu Thu Win  Peter Petchey  Jitlada Innanchai  Baptiste Pradier
Affiliation:1.C.N.R.S., UMR 7055 Préhistoire et Technologie,Université de Paris Ouest la Défense,Nanterre,France;2.Laboratoire Archéomatériaux et Prévision de l’Altération : LMC IRAMAT UMR5060 CNRS et NIMBE UMR3685 CEA/CNRS,Saclay,France;3.Department of Archaeology,Dagon University,Yangon,Myanmar;4.UCL Qatar,University College London,Doha,Qatar;5.College for Humanities and Social Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University,Doha,Qatar;6.Ministry of Religious Affairs and Culture,Mandalay,Myanmar;7.Department of Anthropology and Archaeology,University of Otago,Dunedin,New Zealand;8.Independent Scholar,Lampang,Thailand
Abstract:Myanmar has been notably underrepresented in recent studies of archaeometallurgy in Southeast Asia, despite its richness in both mineral and cultural resources and its potentially central role in long-distance exchange networks linking India, China and peninsular neighbours. Here, we present original analytical data on copper-base artefacts from several Bronze Age and Iron Age sites in Myanmar. Observed microstructures range from as-cast, worked, to fully annealed; compositions include leaded copper, low-tin to high-tin bronzes, and arsenical copper/bronze. Lead isotope analyses indicate that the metal originates from different geological sources, including several that match the lead isotope signatures of known prehistoric copper mines in Thailand and Laos. These archaeometallurgical data, including evidence for secondary copper-base production, more than double those currently available for Myanmar and document the presence of multiple local alloying and working traditions, perhaps chronologically differentiated, as well as identifying possible links to primary mineral sources across the region. Overall, this adds significant new information to the emerging picture of Southeast Asian prehistoric metallurgy at the crossroads of several major ancient cultures.
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