Dorothy Hosler and G. Stresser-Pean present the evidence for bronze alloys from Late Post Classical Mesoamerica.

Date
1992
Type
Academic / Technical Report
Source
Dorothy Hosler
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Secondary
Reference

D. Hosler and G. Stresser-Pean, "The Huastec region: a second locus for the production of bronze alloys in Ancient Mesoamerica," Science 257 (1992): 1215-20

Scribe/Publisher
Science
People
G. Stresser-Pean, Dorothy Hosler
Audience
Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

[Abstract]

Chemical analyses of 51 metal artifacts, one ingot, and two pieces of intermediate processed material from two Late Post Classic archeological sites in the Huastec area of Eastern Mesoamerica point to a second production locus for copper-arsenic-tin alloys, copper-arsenic-tin artifacts, and probably copper-tin and copper-arsenic bronze artifacts. Earlier evidence had indicated that these bronze alloys were produced exclusively in West Mexico. West Mexico was the region where metallurgy first developed in Mesoamerica, although major elements of that technology had been introduced from the metallurgies of Central and South America. The bronze working component of Huastec metallurgy was transmitted from the metalworking regions of West Mexico, most likely through market systems that distributed Aztec goods.

BHR Staff Commentary

RB: to get scan of this (July 17, 2024)

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