The Free Press Journal

Earliest iron artifacts came from outer space

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Cosmic jewellery! Some of the earliest iron artifacts ever found - beads strung into a necklace found in a 5000-year-old Egyptian cemetery - were made from a meteorite, archaeolog­ists have found. Researcher­s have shown that ancient Egyptian iron beads held at the University College London Petrie Museum were hammered from pieces of meteorites, rather than iron ore.

The objects, which trace their origins to outer space, also predate the emergence of iron smelting by two millennia. Carefully hammered into thin sheets before being rolled into tubes, the nine beads – which are over 5000 years-old - were originally strung into a necklace together with other exotic

minerals such as gold and gemstones, revealing the high value of this exotic material in ancient times. "The shape of the beads was obtained by smithing and rolling, most likely involving multiple cycles of hammering, and not by the traditiona­l stone-working techniques such as carving or drilling which were used for the other beads found in the same tomb," Professor Thilo Rehren, lead author of the paper, said. The team's results show that in the fourth millennium BC metalworke­rs had already mastered the smithing of meteoritic iron, an iron- nickel alloy much harder and more brittle than the more commonly worked copper, developing techniques that went on to define the iron age reports PTI.

As a result metalworke­rs had already nearly two millennia of experience of working with meteoritic iron when iron smelting was introduced in the midsecond millennium BC. This knowledge was essential for the developmen­t of iron smelting and the production of iron from iron ore, enabling iron to replace copper and bronze as the main metals used.

Excavated in 1911, in a pre-dynastic cemetery near the village of el-Gerzeh in Lower Egypt, the beads were already completely corroded when they were discovered.

As a result, the team used X-ray methods to determine whether the beads were actually meteoric iron, and not magnetite, which can often be mistaken to be corroded iron due to similar properties.

By scanning the beads with beam of neutrons and gamma-rays, the team were able to reveal the unique texture and also high concentrat­ion of nickel, cobalt, phosphorou­s and germanium – which is only found in trace amounts in iron derived from ore - that is characteri­stics of meteoric iron, without having to attempt invasive analysis which could potentiall­y damage these rare objects. "The really exciting outcome of this research is that we were for the first time able to demonstrat­e conclusive­ly that there are typical trace elements such as cobalt and germanium present in these beads, at levels that only occur in meteoritic iron," Rehren said. "We are also excited to be able to see the internal structure of the beads, revealing how they were rolled and hammered into form," said Rehren. The study was published in the Journal of Archaeolog­ical Science.

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