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Die Metalle bei den Naturvölkern

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About This Book

A systematic survey traces how so-called primitive societies obtain, process, and use metals, focusing on iron, copper, tin, and bronze and their relevance to prehistoric interpretation. It compares geographical regions—Africa, South and Southeast Asia, Oceania and the Americas—using traveler accounts, museum specimens, and interdisciplinary evidence from geology, ethnography, chemistry and linguistics. The work weighs independent invention against diffusion, outlines traditional smelting and smithing practices, and notes regional patterns in metallurgical sequence and alloying. European and Semitic metal traditions are set aside to emphasize largely self-contained metallurgies among non-European peoples and the urgency of documenting vanishing indigenous techniques.

About the Author

Andree, Richard portrait

Richard Andree

Richard Andree was a German geographer and ethnologist known for his explorations and studies of various cultures and regions. His notable works include "Abessinien, das Alpenland unter den Tropen und seine Grenzländer," which examines the geography and peoples of Abyssinia, and "Die Anthropophagie," a study on cannibalism in different cultures. Andree's contributions to the understanding of natural peoples and their environments have made him a significant figure in the fields of geography and anthropology during the 19th century.

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