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Books > Humanities > Archaeology > Archaeological methodology & techniques
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Traces Of The Past - Unraveling The Secrets Of Archaeology Through Chemistry (Paperback, Revised)
Loot Price: R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
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Traces Of The Past - Unraveling The Secrets Of Archaeology Through Chemistry (Paperback, Revised)
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Loot Price R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
|
Where Stonehenge's giant bluestones come from? Was the fall of the
Roman Empire hastened by lead poisoning? How did amber get from the
Baltic to Belize? In exploring these and other historical enigmas,
Joseph Lambert expertly details the rich insights into ancient life
that chemistry alone can provide.Using cutting-edge scientific
methods such as radiocarbon dating, DNA analysis, and elemental
fingerprinting, acclaimed chemist Joseph Lambert expertly details
the rich insights into ancient life that chemistry alone can
provide. He shows, for example, how investigators today can
determine the diet of prehistoric Europeans, the geographical
origin of the marble in a Greek statue, or the reason why the
Liberty Bell cracked. He uses nuclear magnetic resonance
spectroscopy to reconstruct ancient trade routes, and X-ray
diffraction, among other methods, to compare the colour palettes of
the Mesopotamians and Egyptians (the latter were apparently much
more flamboyant). He explains how chemical analysis of DNA can be
used to sort out human lineages and migratory patterns,demographic
trends that affected, in turn, everything from language to the
spread of disease.Chemistry takes centre stage in this fascinating
book, proving that it is not just an analyst of culture, it stands
as one of its primary creators. Lambert offers us a unique glimpse
into a form of technical progress hitherto unappreciated: the
ever-increasing ingenuity of the Human race, as seen through the
prism of its evolving chemical sophistication. We discover how
primitive chemistry was initially used by ancient people as a tool
to improve their daily lives, a feat that was achieved by reworking
molecules of clay into pottery and minerals into metal alloys, and
by turning grains into beer and pitch into sealants.By documenting
the way ancient people manipulated their environment chemically,
Lambert further refines the distinguishing feature of our species.
Early humans were more than tool-makers. They were molecular
transformers.
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