Early metal in South India: Copper and iron in megalithic contexts

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Abstract

In South India early metal artifacts, usually associated with megalithic sites, include both copper and iron. Although in some cases copper artifacts predate those made of iron, there is no evidence of an extensive metallurgical tradition based on copper and its alloys. Typological studies have had limited success in explaining the megalithic sites and the production and consumption of metal, while other approaches have not explicitly addressed the social contexts of metal production. While there emerge some suggestive patterns from the archaeometallurgical evidence to date, understanding the role of metal production and consumption in megalithic contexts means reevaluating traditional paradigms about the nature of these sites and about how metal technologies develop.

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Gullapalli, P. (2014). Early metal in South India: Copper and iron in megalithic contexts. In Archaeometallurgy in Global Perspective: Methods and Syntheses (Vol. 9781461490173, pp. 729–753). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-9017-3_25

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