How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller

The hoard of Farébersviller (Moselle, France) was discovered in 1991 during rescue excavations (See Image above). This set contains 130 "bronze" artifacts, which date to the Late Bronze Age (8th century BC). The technological study of the forming process consisted of three complementary ap...

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Autores principales: Cécile Veber, Michel Pernot
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: EXARC 2012
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/0b2c84abae424e6197d149d20a9375ef
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:0b2c84abae424e6197d149d20a9375ef2021-12-01T14:42:30ZHow Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller2212-8956https://doaj.org/article/0b2c84abae424e6197d149d20a9375ef2012-09-01T00:00:00Zhttps://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10081https://doaj.org/toc/2212-8956The hoard of Farébersviller (Moselle, France) was discovered in 1991 during rescue excavations (See Image above). This set contains 130 "bronze" artifacts, which date to the Late Bronze Age (8th century BC). The technological study of the forming process consisted of three complementary approaches: detailed observations with a binocular microscope, secondly, revealing the alloy composition. Lastly a metallographic examination of samples was made to characterise the microstructure of the metal.Cécile VeberMichel PernotEXARCarticlebronzejewellerybronze agefrancethe netherlandsMuseums. Collectors and collectingAM1-501ArchaeologyCC1-960ENEXARC Journal, Iss 2012/3 (2012)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic bronze
jewellery
bronze age
france
the netherlands
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle bronze
jewellery
bronze age
france
the netherlands
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
Cécile Veber
Michel Pernot
How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
description The hoard of Farébersviller (Moselle, France) was discovered in 1991 during rescue excavations (See Image above). This set contains 130 "bronze" artifacts, which date to the Late Bronze Age (8th century BC). The technological study of the forming process consisted of three complementary approaches: detailed observations with a binocular microscope, secondly, revealing the alloy composition. Lastly a metallographic examination of samples was made to characterise the microstructure of the metal.
format article
author Cécile Veber
Michel Pernot
author_facet Cécile Veber
Michel Pernot
author_sort Cécile Veber
title How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
title_short How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
title_full How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
title_fullStr How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
title_full_unstemmed How Metallographic Examinations Can Give the Forming Process of Metal Artefacts? The Example of the Hoard Of Farébersviller
title_sort how metallographic examinations can give the forming process of metal artefacts? the example of the hoard of farébersviller
publisher EXARC
publishDate 2012
url https://doaj.org/article/0b2c84abae424e6197d149d20a9375ef
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AT michelpernot howmetallographicexaminationscangivetheformingprocessofmetalartefactstheexampleofthehoardoffarebersviller
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