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PRODID:oeguf.ac.at
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:P1D
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UID:69dfb4dddbbc4
DTSTART:20170420T150000
SEQUENCE:0
TRANSP:OPAQUE
DTEND:20170420T200000
LOCATION:HS 7 des Instituts für Urgeschichte und Historische Archäologie
SUMMARY:Arne Espelund: Bloomery ironmaking during the Roman Iron Age in Tr
 øndelag\, Norway. With roots in the Celtic Alpine region?
CLASS:PUBLIC
DESCRIPTION:The first man-made iron seems to have been made in Asia Minor a
 round 1500 BC\, after a development of furnace technology and established 
 skill for the production of copper and bronze. After field studies in Tr
 øndelag \, finds of slag heaps and the use of 14 C-dating\, a large and
  professional production of iron and steel\, beginnng about 300 BC and las
 ting until about AD 500 has been recognized. The raw material was bog iron
  ore. The paper describes the finds\, the extension\, the quality of the i
 ron\, an interpretation of the process and ends with some thoughts about t
 he organization of the iron age society. Because of the large amounts of a
 n excellent metal an export to the Continent was likely. The technology 
 seems to have been imported from the province Noricum in present-day Aus
 tria which was by celtic people (prior to 15 BC).Im Anschluss wartet vor d
 em Hörsaal 7 ein Buffet auf die Besucher. \n\n
DTSTAMP:20260415T175509Z
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