Stech, 'Interpolation in Thucydides', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9512
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9512-stech-interpolation
@@@@95.12.12, Moorey, Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries
P.R.S. Moorey, Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries:
The Archaeoloqical Evidence. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Pp. 414. $105.00. ISBN 0-19-814921-2.
Reviewed by Tamara Stech -- Philadelphia
To review the work of Roger Moorey is an intellectual pleasure
and a daunting task because of his masterly knowledge of the
material about which he writes; as one of my colleagues remarked,
"He is a scholar's scholar." In fact, Ancient Mesopotamian
Materials and Industries (hereafter AMMI) is so
compendious that it cannot be reviewed. It is a source book
which will become the essential starting point for any research
on the materials covered (stone working; ivory, bone, and shell;
ceramics and glassworking; metals; building crafts--mud, clay,
mortars, bitumen, stone, wood, and reeds--organic materials are
excluded because their study must be pursued primarily through
texts). A glance at the index will illustrate the extraordinary
breadth of the work; such a detailed index facilitates research
on specific topics. Moorey is uniquely qualifed to have
undertaken a project of this magnitude because he has seen
firsthand most of the antiquities he describes, he is in close
contact with many field archaeologists and laboratory
researchers working on Mesopotamian materials, and he has
complete knowledge of all the literature on the topic.
The preface sets the stage well in outlining why a region that
has been the focus of intense archaeological and philological
research for so many years was not previously represented by a
book on its material culture. In the past, the material evidence
was used as a typological indicator "for structuring
chronological svstems or for establishing the identities and
relationships of the political and social groups taken to be
defined by materialculture." (p. v). The situation has not
changed greatly in recent years since the development of
agriculture and urbanization have been the primary loci of
socially scientifically inclined researchers working in this
area. In addition, the material itself is often inaccessible in
museums and excavation store rooms, and much of it, particularly
artifacts from early excavations, cannot be placed in context.
At the University of Pennsylvania, for example, fewer than 80 of
over 800 copper-base artifacts supposedly from the Royal Cemetery
at Ur can be assigned any sort of context.
Other helpful introductory sections include chronology,
historical geography (where are Magan and Meluhha?, etc.), and a
review of the agricultural background and the technological
developments that accompanied/drove urbanization. Moorey also
briefly covers the means of resource procurement, and points out
that exchange relationships were highly complex and variable, so
they cannot be categorized simply as reciprocal, redistributive,
down-the-line, etc. In discussing the relationship of texts and
archaeology, he emphasizes the important point that texts were
not written by technologists, which is still sometimes forgotten,
especially by philologists. For example, texts give specific
proportions of copper to tin for making bronze, but metalworkers
did not or were not always able to follow the ideal recipe, as
the analyses indicate. While texts tell us that bronze was being
made by the mid-third millennium, analyses suggest that it had by
no means passed into general usage, a disjunction perhaps to be
expected from documents relating largely to social elites and
those who supported them.
The section of AMMI on which I can comment most
authoritatively is that about metalworking, but, since we have
shared many of the preliminary results of the Mesopotamian Metals
Project with Moorey, I have little to add. There is one minor
technical point which deserves comment. In discussing slags from
Norsun Tepe in southeastern Anatolia, Moorey (p. 244) gives
Zwicker's (1980 in AMMI bibliography) findings that
chloride fluxes were used in smelting copper ores in the
mid-fourth millennium. This conclusion is somewhat perplexing
because chloride fluxes would do nothing to aid in copper
smelting, although I admit the possibilities that their use was
part of experiment or that a copper chloride ore (such as the
rare atacamite, CuCl2 3Cu(OH)2) might have been smelted. In
rechecking Zwicker's original publication, I noted in the
micrograph (Zwicker 1980: 26, fig. 11) a phenomenon with which I
am familiar. About twenty years ago, Robert Maddin and I
observed crystals similar to those in Zwicker's micrographs
caught up in voids in porous metals and slags. We determined,
through a series of repolishing and re-etching experiments and
scanning elctron microscopy, that our crystals were chloride and
that they were artifacts of a ferric chloride etchant. We then
switched to ammonium hydroxide etches for copper and copper-base
artifacts to avoid the chloride deposits. Zwicker does not state
which etchant he used, but ferric chlrode is a common etchant for
copper, so there is a possibility that chloride fluxes at Norsun
Tepe are the result of a tramp effect produced by the etchant.
Moorey touches on recycling in several places, for example, in
connection with the group of Old Babylonian agricultural
implements found at Tell Sifr. In the Mesopotamian Metals
Project, we have found scientific evidence for recycling in at
least two samples dating to EDIIIA. To illustrate, one of these,
a dagger/knife from PG 49 at Ur, has a microscopic bit of
material in its matrix which did not go into solution with the
bulk of the material and which has a different composition--with
a higher melting point--than the matrix. Logically, we believe
that recycling must have taken place since the time that metal
could be melted, but it is useful to have scientific
confirmation.
In sum, Moorey's accomplishment is magisterial. Yes, there
are a few typos, and I would have liked illustrations of more of
the artifacts discussed. Realistically, the latter was
impossible since Moorey cites thousands of artifacts, which would
require another book to print them. With AMMI and a good
library, however, any researcher can become an expert on a
particular topic in a short time. As usual, we owe much to Roger
Moorey.