News Release

Silver and the Phoenician expansion

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

The Dor Silver Hoard

image: The Dor silver hoard. view more 

Credit: Image courtesy of the Tel Dor Expedition, the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, Ardon Bar-Hama (photographer), and the Israel Museum.

A study finds that lead isotopes in Phoenician silver artifacts chart a course of exploration and expansion into Europe and Asia in the 10th and 9th centuries BCE. Phoenician expansion throughout the Mediterranean in the first millennium BCE is a significant cultural inflection point in the history of northern Africa, southern Europe, and the Levant. The reason for the Phoenician expansion is a subject of debate. Tzilla Eshel, Yigal Erel, and colleagues analyzed lead isotopes in silver artifacts from four hoards of Phoenician silver dating to the 10th and 9th centuries BCE. The lead impurities in the silver are an artifact of the silver production process and can identify the metal's source region. In connection with archaeological studies, the authors found that the silver in the artifacts came from regions in Anatolia, Sardinia, and the Iberian Peninsula, with the oldest artifacts identified as Anatolian and the most recent artifacts as Iberian. The results outline a temporal and geographic progression of the Phoenician quest for silver, including the acquisition of silver production methods in Anatolia and a shift to almost exclusive use of Iberian silver in the course of the 9th century BCE. According to the authors, the results suggest that the search for silver established precolonization contacts between Phoenicia and the West, and that silver was likely the driving force behind the Phoenician expansion in the Mediterranean.

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Article #18-17951: "Lead isotopes in silver reveal earliest Phoenician quest for metals in the west Mediterranean," by Tzilla Eshel, Yigal Erel, Naama Yahalom-Mack, Ofir Tirosh, and Ayelet Gilboa.

MEDIA CONTACTS: Tzilla Eshel, University of Haifa, ISRAEL; tel: 972509725288, 97246255014; e-mail: <tzillaeshel@gmail.com>; Yigal Erel, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, ISRAEL; tel: 972548820302; e-mail: <yigal.erel@huji.ac.il>


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