


This is true for finds from the eighth to seventh millennium BC, including a copper pendant from Shanidar cave in Iraq, copper beads from Cayonu Tepsi in Turkey, a rolled copper bead from Ali Kosh in Iran, and artifacts from Tell Halula in Syria. Throughout most of the Old World, the rise of copper metallurgy almost universally occurs in the same pattern, with ancient groups beginning to work the metal in order to fabricate ornaments. The early manufacture of advanced copper tools sets North America apart from most of the ancient world. Bone was used to date the contexts of this find to between 5,000 and 4,000 BC.Ĭopper knife, spear points, awls, and spade, from the Late Archaic period, Wisconsin, 3000 BC-1000 BC. Recently, one such point featuring four teeth on one side and three on the other was found at the Sandy Lake Dam site in Aitkin County, Minnesota, with eight other copper tools and 24 pieces of scrap metal. Copper points featuring toothed or notched bases for hafting attachments have been found in Wisconsin and elsewhere, usually termed “saw tooth” or “serrate tang” points, and can be seen in photographs from numerous collections. This method has recently dated two copper conical points from Vilas County, Wisconsin to 5740 +/- 40 BC and 5355 +/- 60 BC. ‘Evidence exists of copper trading routes throughout North America among native peoples, proven by isotopic analysis.’ Native copper from Ray mine, Arizona (Rob Lavinsky, / CC BY-SA 3.0 ) Advanced Copper ToolsĪccelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) allows for the dating of copper artifacts by showing the age of textiles or wooden fragments adhering to (and partially preserved by) the artifacts. Furthermore, various dating techniques are constantly pushing the fabrication of advanced copper tools further back into America’s ancient past.ĭiorama of Anishinaabe people mining copper near Lake Superior (Ellenm1/ CC BY-SA 3.0 ) A far more interesting picture has emerged in recent decades, as archaeologists have gradually realized that Great Lakes copper was at the center of an industry for thousands of years, utilized by many different cultures. Obviously, one of these criteria is technological advancement, considered by some to truly get underway with the introduction of metallurgy.įor some time it was believed that the people who exploited the massive copper supplies from the North American Great Lakes region were members of a single cultural entity, once referred to as the Old Copper Culture. There are several criteria archaeologists look for in the quest to determine the level of cultural advancement of ancient peoples.
