COPPER, Introduction and Overview by J .C. Agarwal and J .C. Yannopoulos xv Index to Volumes I and 11

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 250 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1976
Abstract
Although copper ranks very low in the order of abundance of elements in the crust of the earth, it has been one of the first metals utilized by mar, at his emergence from the Stone Age, about 10,000 years ago. Use of copper for weapons, tools, utensils and ornaments dates back to the twilight of history, 6,000-5,000 B.C. Native copper outcrops and the malleability of the metal explain its very early use by the cave-dwellers. The working, melting and extraction of copper from its minerals are among the oldest metallurgical achievements of the human race. The oldest complete smelting installations for the extraction of copper from its minerals, dated about the fourth millenium B.C., were recently discovered in the Timna Valley, Wadi Arabah, Israel. (1) The history of the developments of the extractive metallurgy of copper has been adequately reviewed recently. (2,3) The center of copper production migrated from the Eastern Mediterranean to Northern Europe (Mansfeld, Germany, Swansea, Wales) towards the end of the Middle Ages (1500 A.D.). The production of the metal was boosted tremendously in North America since the end of the nineteenth century (Fig. 1).
Citation
APA:
(1976) COPPER, Introduction and Overview by J .C. Agarwal and J .C. Yannopoulos xv Index to Volumes I and 11MLA: COPPER, Introduction and Overview by J .C. Agarwal and J .C. Yannopoulos xv Index to Volumes I and 11. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1976.