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The Earliest Lead Object in the Levant
Author(s) -
Naama YahalomMack,
Dafna Langgut,
Omri Dvir,
Ofir Tirosh,
Adi EliyahuBehar,
Yigal Erel,
Boaz Langford,
Amos Frumkin,
Mika Ullman,
Uri Davidovich
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0142948
Subject(s) - chalcolithic , archaeology , cave , radiocarbon dating , geology , object (grammar) , beaker , lead (geology) , smelting , geography , ancient history , bronze age , paleontology , history , metallurgy , materials science , philosophy , linguistics
In the deepest section of a large complex cave in the northern Negev desert, Israel, a bi-conical lead object was found logged onto a wooden shaft. Associated material remains and radiocarbon dating of the shaft place the object within the Late Chalcolithic period, at the late 5 th millennium BCE. Based on chemical and lead isotope analysis, we show that this unique object was made of almost pure metallic lead, likely smelted from lead ores originating in the Taurus range in Anatolia. Either the finished object, or the raw material, was brought to the southern Levant, adding another major component to the already-rich Late Chalcolithic metallurgical corpus known to-date. The paper also discusses possible uses of the object, suggesting that it may have been used as a spindle whorl, at least towards its deposition.

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