Copper working technologies, contexts of use, and social complexity in the Eastern Woodlands of Native North America

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Abstract

The creative ways in which native North American peoples of the Eastern Woodlands utilized copper throughout prehistory present provocative contrasts to models of Old World metallurgical development. Archaeological approaches that incorporate laboratory methods into investigations of indigenous metalworking practice have brought new insights and raised new questions about the development and use of techniques, sources of materials, and the social dynamics of copper consumption. This chapter integrates the results of these studies into a discussion of copper use in Old Copper, Hopewellian, and Mississippian traditions that focuses on illuminating the complex relations among levels of technological sophistication in the manipulation of the material itself, the often elaborate and meaning-laden contexts in which artifacts were used, and the relative social complexity of the cultures that supported copper procurement, transformation, and use. It is suggested that 'technological style' approaches will assist archaeologists in efforts to flesh out culture-specific aspects of its consumption.

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Ehrhardt, K. L. (2013). Copper working technologies, contexts of use, and social complexity in the Eastern Woodlands of Native North America. In Archaeometallurgy in Global Perspective: Methods and Syntheses (pp. 303–328). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-9017-3_13

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