Metals and Metallurgy - Research Article from Encyclopedia of Religion

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 10 pages of information about Metals and Metallurgy.

Metals and Metallurgy - Research Article from Encyclopedia of Religion

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 10 pages of information about Metals and Metallurgy.
This section contains 2,641 words
(approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Metals and Metallurgy Encyclopedia Article

METALS AND METALLURGY. Archaic, nonliterate peoples, as well as prehistoric populations, worked meteoric iron long before they learned to use the ferrous ores occurring on the earth's surface. They treated certain ores like stones, that is, they regarded them as raw material for the manufacture of lithic tools. A similar technique was applied until recently by certain peoples having no knowledge of metallurgy: they worked meteorites with silex (flint) hammers and fashioned objects whose shapes resembled their stone models in all respects. This was how the Greenland Inuit (Eskimo) made their knives out of meteoric iron (Andrée, 1984, pp. 121ff.). When Cortés asked the Aztec chieftains where they had gotten their knives, they pointed to the sky. Like the Maya of Yucatan and the Inca of Peru, the Aztec used only meteoric iron, which they valued more highly than gold. In fact, excavations...

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This section contains 2,641 words
(approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Metals and Metallurgy Encyclopedia Article
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Metals and Metallurgy from Macmillan. Copyright © 2001-2006 by Macmillan Reference USA, an imprint of the Gale Group. All rights reserved.