Metallurgical technology and resources mobility in the El Argar culture: An archaeometallurgical study at Laderas del Castillo (Callosa de Segura, Alicante)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Escanilla Artigas, Nicolau; Murillo Barroso, María de las Mercedes; Soriano, Eni; López Padilla, Juan Antonio; Jover Maestre, Francisco Javier; Lackinger, AaronEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Metallurgical slag Arsenical copper SEM-EDS
Fecha
2024-12-07Referencia bibliográfica
Escanilla Artigas, N. et. al. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 17, 3 (2025). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-024-02109-y]
Resumen
Metallurgy has been defined as a pivotal activity in understanding of the development of El Argar society. Nonetheless, comprehensive
studies of extractive metallurgical processes based on archaeometallurgical analyses remain lacking. This article
examines the production remains found at the El Argar site of Laderas del Castillo, documented from 2150 to 1950 cal BC,
including samples of slag, crucibles, copper prills and artefacts. Laderas del Castillo emerges as a key site for understanding
the technology and organization of metallurgical production in the El Argar world. There are few sites with archaeometric
analysis of metallurgical remains, and the present case allows for an almost complete view of the entire metallurgical chaîne
opératoire in this period. Microstructural analyses of smelting remains by SEM-EDS reveal a technological tradition that
mirrors the previous Copper Age one and the direct exploitation of complex arsenical copper ores with occasional copper
sulphides. Despite the existence of closer mineralizations, lead isotope analyses show the exploitation of various copper
resources and sources far from the settlement (Linares, the Interior of the Baetic Cordilleras and Almagrera, about 300, 200
and 140 km respectively). These active exchange networks in Laderas del Castillo reflect the same pattern found in the rest
of the El Argar territory, which is based on the intensive exploitation of mineralizations in the interior of the Baetics and the
Southeast of the peninsula. Some of these sources have also been observed in Copper Age metallurgy, suggesting that the
mobility and exchange networks operating in the southeast during the El Argar period were rooted in earlier archaeological
phases, indicating a wide and complex exchange network in the region.