Excavations at Copper Queen Mine, northwestern Zimbabwe.

IF 1.3 3区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY SOUTH AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL BULLETIN Pub Date : 2002-12-01 DOI:10.2307/3888857
L. Swan
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

In the Zimbabwean past, farming societies utilized mineral resources for their own use and for exchange to local and regional populations, as well as to markets beyond African borders. Successful agriculture was constrained by environmental hazards, principally unpredictable and often inadequate rainfall. Farming communities managed this predicament in various ways. It is likely that some groups used mineral resources found in the vicinity of their settlements to produce materials or items to exchange. The social contexts that defined the nature of mineral production and exchange altered between the mid-first and mid-second millennium AD, as social ranks emerged and political and economic systems became increasingly complex. The thesis is a commentary on how the motivation of society to broaden its resource base, to improve the benefits to households and to society in general, contributed to the emergence of leaders and, ultimately, of an elite class. The focus of the research is on iron and copper production because the author has examined gold production thoroughly in a previous study. Four published papers outline the history of iron and copper production in Zimbabwe. The papers provide case studies of the scale and social context of iron and copper production and exchange.
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在津巴布韦西北部的铜皇后矿的挖掘。
在津巴布韦过去,农业社会利用矿产资源供自己使用,并与当地和区域人口以及非洲边界以外的市场进行交换。成功的农业受到环境危害的限制,主要是不可预测的和经常不足的降雨。农业社区以各种方式应对这种困境。一些群体很可能利用在其定居点附近发现的矿产资源来生产材料或物品进行交换。界定矿物生产和交换性质的社会背景在公元第一千年中期和第二个千年中期之间发生了变化,因为社会等级出现了,政治和经济制度变得越来越复杂。这篇论文是对社会扩大其资源基础、提高家庭和整个社会的利益的动机如何促成领导人的出现,并最终促成精英阶层的出现的评论。研究的重点是铁和铜的生产,因为作者在以前的研究中已经对金的生产进行了彻底的研究。四篇已发表的论文概述了津巴布韦铁和铜生产的历史。论文提供了铁和铜生产和交换的规模和社会背景的案例研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The South African Archaeological Bulletin - the longest established archaeological journal in sub-Saharan Africa, it contains the cutting edge of research on southern Africa. Appearing twice a year, it includes current research, notes by readers and book reviews.
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