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Cargoes of Iron Semi‐Products Recovered from Shipwrecks off the C armel Coast, I srael
Author(s) -
Galili E.,
Bauvais S.,
Rosen B.,
Dillmann P.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
archaeometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1475-4754
pISSN - 0003-813X
DOI - 10.1111/arcm.12077
Subject(s) - iron ore , period (music) , oceanography , geography , geology , archaeology , art , aesthetics
Underwater surveys along the I sraeli C armel coast have revealed six cargoes of iron semi‐products associated with shipwrecks. They are described and dated according to the associated artefacts. Metallographic and chemical analyses on samples from the biggest cargo have determined the stages of the chaîne opératoire , identified the properties of the iron and characterized the iron trade along the I sraeli coast. The new discoveries contribute to our understanding of the circulation of iron in the S outh L evant, which was characterized by an almost complete absence of local iron production. During the B yzantine and C rusader periods, this absence was compensated by long‐distance sea trade, depending on political circumstances and restrictions. Three main types of iron semi‐products were identified: (a) partly consolidated blooms, (b) short pointed bars and (c) elongated pointed bars. The cargoes discovered represent a time period of nearly a millennium. Altogether, 148 iron semi‐products were studied. Of these, 166 were from cargo a, which was dated by coins to around 1130–1200 ce . Those coins could have been imported from E urope for C rusader military and civil uses in the L evant. The iron from cargoes b, d and f, dated perhaps to the B yzantine period, could have been imported from A natolia or V enice for military and civil purposes.