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Ancient site yields a copper whopper. (Archaeology).


Excavations in southern Jordan have uncovered the largest Early Bronze Age Bronze Age, period in the development of technology when metals were first used regularly in the manufacture of tools and weapons. Pure copper and bronze, an alloy of copper and tin, were used indiscriminately at first; this early period is sometimes called the  metal works in the Middle East. The factory-like operation, which ran from around 4,700 to 4,200 years ago, represented a "quantum leap quantum leap
n.
An abrupt change or step, especially in method, information, or knowledge: "War was going to take a quantum leap; it would never be the same" Garry Wills.
" in the scale of copper production at a time when ancient cities in the area experienced rapid growth, archaeologist Thomas E. Levy of the University of California, San Diego UCSD is consistently ranked among the top ten public universities for undergraduate education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.[3] It is a Public Ivy. [1] For graduate studies, most of UCSD's Ph.D.  and his coworkers report in the June Antiquity.

The Jordanian site, known as Khirbat Hamra Ifdan, contains areas for an assembly-line production of copper tools and ingots distributed among more than 80 rooms, courtyards, and other spaces. Smelting debris in and around more than a dozen furnaces throughout the site indicates that several hundred tons of copper were produced there, the scientists say. Among the artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 found at the site are copper axes, chisels, pins, and ingots; clay casting molds for making copper objects; partially processed lumps of ore from which copper was extracted; and crucibles for melting copper-rich ore.

Chemical analyses of the metal found at the site show that workers there followed a complex recipe for refining certain types of ore to produce high-quality copper. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Levy, this metal's chemical composition resembles that of copper tools previously found at several smaller Early Bronze Age sites in Israel and supports the theory that copper was traded throughout the ancient Middle East.--B. B.
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Article Details
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:7JORD
Date:Jul 27, 2002
Words:229
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