Bronze Age artifacts used meteoric iron

Authored by www2.cnrs.fr and submitted by MaryADraper

The Iron Age began in Anatolia and the Caucasus around 1200 BCE. But nearly 2,000 years earlier, various cultures were already fashioning objects out of iron. These items were extremely rare and always greatly treasured. Iron ore abounds on the Earth's surface. So what made these artifacts so valuable? Initial research had shown that some were made with iron from meteorites, which led scientists to wonder how many others were. Albert Jambon gathered the available data and conducted his own nondestructive chemical analyses of samples using a portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometer. His collection of iron artifacts includes beads from Gerzeh (Egypt, −3200 BCE); a dagger from Alaca Höyük (Turkey, −2500 BCE); a pendant from Umm el-Marra (Syria, −2300 BCE); an axe from Ugarit (Syria, −1400 BCE) and several others from the Shang dynasty civilization (China, −1400 BCE); and the dagger, bracelet, and headrest of Tutankhamen (Egypt, −1350 BCE).

His analyses revealed that each of these Bronze Age artifacts was made with meteoric iron. When large celestial bodies like our planet are forming, nearly all nickel drifts towards the molten iron core. Thus, it is extremely rare to find nickel on the surface. However, some meteorites are created when celestial bodies are shattered. If these meteorites are composed of core material, they mostly contain iron with high levels of nickel and cobalt. This characteristic makes it possible to identify the source of iron. Meteoric iron is also already in a metal state, ready for use, which explains why it went into all Bronze Age iron artifacts. In contrast, the iron compounds in terrestrial ores must first undergo the process of reduction, which removes bound oxygen to yield the desired metal. This is the basis of smelting in furnaces, a breakthrough that marked the beginning of the Iron Age. With smelting, Iron Age cultures could forget rare extraterrestrial metal and tap into terrestrial iron ores, which were far more abundant and easier to procure. Albert Jambon's findings refute certain theories proposing that nickel-laden iron alloys were obtained from terrestrial ores.

Notes: 1Albert Jambon also works with the Géoazur research unit (CNRS / Université Nice Sophia Antipolis / Côte d'Azur Observatory/ IRD).

Yop_solo on December 5th, 2017 at 13:08 UTC »

Man, some of those dudes in the bronze age must have been insufferable.

"That's a nice hatchet you've got there. What's that? Is that bronze? My knife is made of iron. It's from space"

HKSculpture on December 5th, 2017 at 10:38 UTC »

There's a bit of hypothetical history theories written by Lennart Meri in his book "Hõbevalge", loosely translated as Silverwhite: one of these is that ancient Estonians from the island Saaremaa rose to a high military and economic power level due to the Kaali meteorite. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaali_crater

Supposedly it was considered a holy lake from which meteroite iron could be gotten (close to a tonne or more) and used to trade and forge high quality weapons. Likely human sacrifice and the like was common in return. The impact event itself was cataclysmic and left a lasting mark in surrounding folklore as the sun falling or dragons flying in the skies as forests were flattened and settlements destroyed in a vast area.

So this article kind of brought that in mind.

lost_in_life_34 on December 5th, 2017 at 02:33 UTC »

explains some of the religious aura about them