How did man in Metal age make Bronze?
Answers
Throughout history and the advancement of civilization, the discovery, development and application of metals has driven the way that people live and societies have been organically shaped. Historians use the intrinsic link of industrial development and the metals discovered and prevalent at that time, to describe certain periods of significant social and technological advancements. Such as, the Stone Age, Bronze Age and Iron Age.
Created from content provided by ASM International in the book "Metallurgy for the Non-Metallurgist, Second Edition
Editor(s): Arthur C. Reardon"
Since man first discovered copper (Around 9000BC), a naturally occurring, relatively pure metal, native to many countries, the study and knowledge of metallurgy has been fundamental to the way humans have lived. Stemming from a very basic curiousity as to how this new material could be used, and it's behavior in various situations and under a variety of conditions metallurgy has developed from an art to a science.
Our fascination with metals began with Prehistoric man who began using a range of metals.
Six Metals Were used by Prehistoric Man
Prehistoric man is known to have used six metals. These were:
Gold
Silver
Copper
Tin
Lead
Iron.
Each with distinct properties, Prehistoric man discovered that some metals were more useful for certain jobs and they began to specify particular metals for applications. For example; Gold and silver are very soft and were therefore predominantly used for decoration and bullion for trade. Copper offered Prehistoric man more qualities and could be hardened by hammering or forging and was therefore used to make tools - albeit very primitive ones. The discovery of Bronze (an alloy of copper and tin) changed the way that Man lived, hunted, fought and prospered. It was stronger than copper, could be hardened by forging, and could be cast to a specific shape.
Lead is soft, easily worked, and Prehistoric man realised that it was perfect for making into vessels to transport liquids. Later on, Lead would be a fundamental material in the manufacture of pipes such as those used to transport water in the early Roman Empire.
Image 1: A bronze Kuei handled vessel on a rectangular plinth (34.30 × 44.50 cm) cast in China in the 7th century B.C. Courtesy of ©The Cleveland Museum of Art, Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. Fund, 1974.73
Iron was a game changer, it was such an important material, used for all sorts of applications and the phenomenal growth of its use led to the 'Iron Age' a transition from the less developed Bronze Age.
Today, our society is completely reliant on metals, often far removed and much more exotic than the wrought Copper first discovered thousands of years ago. And, the science of metallurgy is now one of the most widely documented and researched materials sciences. So where has our fascination with metals come from to become so dependent on Mettallurgy?
How Were Metals First Discovered?
The first recorded metals used were those found, in an unreacted state referred to as 'Native Metals'. These metals could be mined and used without the need of more complicated extraction or separation from other metals or nonmetallic atoms. Most metals naturally occur as minerals or compounds, where the metal atom has reacted with other metals or nonmetallic atoms, one of the key steps of the development of Metallurgy as a science, revolves around the extraction of metals from their naturally states.