First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.

This study presents new analytical data from the site of el-Ahwat, a short-lived Iron Age I settlement located at the northern edge of the Central Hill Country in Israel. The site's substantial metal assemblage, including copper and bronze spills and slag, provides direct evidence for on-site b...

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Main Authors: Tzilla Eshel, Yoav Bornstein, Gal Bermatov-Paz, Shay Bar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0329175
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author Tzilla Eshel
Yoav Bornstein
Gal Bermatov-Paz
Shay Bar
author_facet Tzilla Eshel
Yoav Bornstein
Gal Bermatov-Paz
Shay Bar
author_sort Tzilla Eshel
collection DOAJ
description This study presents new analytical data from the site of el-Ahwat, a short-lived Iron Age I settlement located at the northern edge of the Central Hill Country in Israel. The site's substantial metal assemblage, including copper and bronze spills and slag, provides direct evidence for on-site bronze production. Microstructural features indicate that primary alloying of copper and tin-rather than the re-melting of scrap-was practiced at the site. Lead isotope analysis, chemical composition, and microstructure link some of the metal specifically to the Faynan ores, and other finds to the Timna ores, suggesting that both ores, possibly controlled by a joint polity, supplied copper to el-Ahwat. These findings challenge long-standing assumptions about the localization of bronzeworking in urban lowland centers, and open new perspectives on the inland trade routes and social organization of the early Iron Age southern Levant. We propose that el-Ahwat was part of a broader and more complex network of copper distribution and bronze production, extending from the Arabah to the coast, including also peripheral highland communities.
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spelling doaj-art-700fcd0ee8544f9bac7397c58e0780c82025-08-23T05:31:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01208e032917510.1371/journal.pone.0329175First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.Tzilla EshelYoav BornsteinGal Bermatov-PazShay BarThis study presents new analytical data from the site of el-Ahwat, a short-lived Iron Age I settlement located at the northern edge of the Central Hill Country in Israel. The site's substantial metal assemblage, including copper and bronze spills and slag, provides direct evidence for on-site bronze production. Microstructural features indicate that primary alloying of copper and tin-rather than the re-melting of scrap-was practiced at the site. Lead isotope analysis, chemical composition, and microstructure link some of the metal specifically to the Faynan ores, and other finds to the Timna ores, suggesting that both ores, possibly controlled by a joint polity, supplied copper to el-Ahwat. These findings challenge long-standing assumptions about the localization of bronzeworking in urban lowland centers, and open new perspectives on the inland trade routes and social organization of the early Iron Age southern Levant. We propose that el-Ahwat was part of a broader and more complex network of copper distribution and bronze production, extending from the Arabah to the coast, including also peripheral highland communities.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0329175
spellingShingle Tzilla Eshel
Yoav Bornstein
Gal Bermatov-Paz
Shay Bar
First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
PLoS ONE
title First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
title_full First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
title_fullStr First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
title_full_unstemmed First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
title_short First evidence of bronze production in the Iron Age I southern Levant: A direct link to the Arabah copper polity.
title_sort first evidence of bronze production in the iron age i southern levant a direct link to the arabah copper polity
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0329175
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