Friday, May 28, 2021

Researchers Unearth Oldest Gold Find In Southwest Germany


This is an obvious trade good and a natural store of value not to be used for much else.  1800 BC puts it back in the Bronze age with plenty of metal workers even here or anywhere.  Recall Bronze Age Troy fell in 1179 BC.  Clea\rly all part of a Northern european continium.

Yet the oldest found here as well.

Again it is lovely to have confirmation.  Recall that all these folks worked mostly with wood and stone and raw hide.  Metal was a useful addition but not necessary.  All good.


Researchers Unearth Oldest Gold Find In Southwest Germany

5/25/2021 06:00:00 PM


https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2021/05/researchers-unearth-oldest-gold-find-in.html?


Archaeologists working in the district of Tübingen in southwest Germany have discovered the region’s earliest gold object to date. It is a spiral ring of gold wire unearthed in autumn 2020 from the grave of an Early Bronze Age woman. It is about 3,800 years old, according to analyses. Precious metal finds from this period are very rare in southwestern Germany.







The gold wire spiral was found in the grave of an Early Bronze Age woman in Ammerbuch-Reusten,
Tübingen district [Credit: Yvonne Mühleis, LAD Esslingen]




The gold probably originates from Cornwall in southwest Britain. The archaeologists say it is unusually early proof of the far-reaching trade in luxury objects of the people of that time. The excavation was led by Professor Raiko Krauss from the Institute of Prehistory and Medieval Archaeology at the University of Tübingen and Dr. Jörg Bofinger from the Baden-Württemberg State Office for Cultural Heritage Management, based in Esslingen.








The Early Bronze Age female burial as found. The green pin (top center) marks the place the
gold spiral was uncovered [Credit: University of Tübingen, Institute of Prehistory
and Medieval Archaeology]

During the excavation, the researchers found that the woman was buried in a fetal position, facing south. This type of burial is typical of the late Neolithic period in Central Europe. The only object found in the grave was the spiral roll made of gold wire, located behind the woman’s remains at about hip height. It may have been a hair ornament and indicates that the wearer was of high social status. Radiocarbon dating of the bones puts the burial between about 1850 and 1700 BCE – the Early Bronze Age.








Students from the Institute of Prehistory and Medieval Archaeology of the University of Tübingen
excavating the grave in 2020 [Credit: Veronika Stein/University of Tübingen]




The gold contains about 20 percent silver, less than two percent copper, and has traces of platinum and tin. This composition points to a natural gold alloy typical of gold washed from rivers. The pattern of trace elements resembles that of gold from deposits in Cornwall, specifically from the Carnon River area, the research team says. This clear connection to northwestern Europe contrasts with older gold and precious metal finds in Europe, which originated almost exclusively from deposits in southeastern Europe. There is evidence that jewellery made of gold was produced as early as the fifth millennium BCE.







Preparing the grave to be taken out in one piece: Christoph Kühnbach of the regional heritage
authority with the University of Tübingen’s Hannah Huber and Raiko Krauss (left to right)
[Credit: Veronika Stein/University of Tübingen]

The research team considers the gold find from the Tübingen district as evidence that western cultural groups gained increasing influence over central Europe in the first half of the second millennium BCE. The woman's grave was located not far from a group of other Early Bronze Age burials and is apparently connected with the prehistoric hilltop settlement on the nearby Kirchberg.



The find is published in Praehistorische Zeitschrift.

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