Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Too Old? Remarks on New Evidence of Ironworking in North-Central Africa

Too Old? Remarks on New Evidence of Ironworking in North-Central Africa Too old? Remarks on New Evidence of Ironworking in North-Central Africa Manfred K.H. Eggert The preceding paper by É. Zangato and A.F.C. Holl presents fascinating new evidence of very old iron in the Djohong area of north-eastern Cameroon near the border to the Central African Republic. It has already elicited some rather controversial comments by S. MacEachern, D. Killick and B. Clist, which were cited by H. Pringle (2009) in an article on the new findings in Science Magazine. Zangato and Holl have answered to this in their article. It has long been known that neither Meroë nor Assyrian-dominated Egypt nor the Phoenician and Greek colonies of North Africa can be claimed as the origin and way station respectively of sub-Saharan iron production (Miller & van der Merwe 1994; wiesMüller 1996; e ggerT 1999 [1984]). Considering the impressive number of radiocarbon dates for first millennium BCE iron in sub-Saharan Africa there is simply no sufficiently old empirical evidence of iron from either Meroë or Assyrian Egypt or the Phoenician and Greek colonies. Accordingly, Zangato and Holl rightly reject any diffusion theory of iron production and ironworking on empirical grounds. As the German cultural anthropologist and sociologist W.E. MühlMann http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of African Archaeology Brill

Too Old? Remarks on New Evidence of Ironworking in North-Central Africa

Journal of African Archaeology , Volume 8 (1): 37 – Oct 25, 2010

Loading next page...
 
/lp/brill/too-old-remarks-on-new-evidence-of-ironworking-in-north-central-africa-Z7rp0KqLDW

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© Copyright 2010 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
1612-1651
eISSN
2191-5784
DOI
10.3213/1612-1651-10158
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Too old? Remarks on New Evidence of Ironworking in North-Central Africa Manfred K.H. Eggert The preceding paper by É. Zangato and A.F.C. Holl presents fascinating new evidence of very old iron in the Djohong area of north-eastern Cameroon near the border to the Central African Republic. It has already elicited some rather controversial comments by S. MacEachern, D. Killick and B. Clist, which were cited by H. Pringle (2009) in an article on the new findings in Science Magazine. Zangato and Holl have answered to this in their article. It has long been known that neither Meroë nor Assyrian-dominated Egypt nor the Phoenician and Greek colonies of North Africa can be claimed as the origin and way station respectively of sub-Saharan iron production (Miller & van der Merwe 1994; wiesMüller 1996; e ggerT 1999 [1984]). Considering the impressive number of radiocarbon dates for first millennium BCE iron in sub-Saharan Africa there is simply no sufficiently old empirical evidence of iron from either Meroë or Assyrian Egypt or the Phoenician and Greek colonies. Accordingly, Zangato and Holl rightly reject any diffusion theory of iron production and ironworking on empirical grounds. As the German cultural anthropologist and sociologist W.E. MühlMann

Journal

Journal of African ArchaeologyBrill

Published: Oct 25, 2010

There are no references for this article.