Results 291 to 300 of about 10,618,925 (346)
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2004
Historians claim that the Iron Age began between 1500 and 1000 B.c. (at least in some parts of the world). This does not mean that iron was unknown to man before that time; quite the contrary is the case. Meteoric iron (which has a large nickel content) must have been used by prehistoric people as early as 4000 B.c.
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Historians claim that the Iron Age began between 1500 and 1000 B.c. (at least in some parts of the world). This does not mean that iron was unknown to man before that time; quite the contrary is the case. Meteoric iron (which has a large nickel content) must have been used by prehistoric people as early as 4000 B.c.
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2002
European archaeologists formulated the idea of an Iron Age early in the nineteenth century, as they began organizing the growing collections of antiquities in museums then being established in different parts of the continent (Kuhn 1976). Changes in agricultural technology and the large-scale earth-moving connected with the construction of railroads ...
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European archaeologists formulated the idea of an Iron Age early in the nineteenth century, as they began organizing the growing collections of antiquities in museums then being established in different parts of the continent (Kuhn 1976). Changes in agricultural technology and the large-scale earth-moving connected with the construction of railroads ...
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Four Iron Age Silver Hoards from Southern Phoenicia: From Bundles to Hacksilber
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental research, 2018Tzilla Eshel +5 more
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What is on the menu in a Celtic town? Iron Age diet reconstructed at Basel-Gasfabrik, Switzerland
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 2017C. Knipper +9 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
1970
By Iron Age here is meant the Pre-Roman Iron Age of Europe, since it is the spread of the Roman Empire which brings this short account of prehistory to a close, however incomplete it must thereby remain. The literate civilisation of Rome, for all its stranglehold on the ancient world, did not penetrate to every corner of even Europe: the legions never ...
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By Iron Age here is meant the Pre-Roman Iron Age of Europe, since it is the spread of the Roman Empire which brings this short account of prehistory to a close, however incomplete it must thereby remain. The literate civilisation of Rome, for all its stranglehold on the ancient world, did not penetrate to every corner of even Europe: the legions never ...
openaire +1 more source
Radiocarbon: An International Journal of Cosmogenic Isotope Research, 2015
Y. Asscher +4 more
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Y. Asscher +4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source

