 |
|
|
Boginfo |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
Museum Tusculanums Forlag bruger cookies for at huske dine indstillinger. Ved at bruge sitet accepterer du dette. Accepter cookies
|
| |
Nyhedsbrev
Print siden
Buchwald, Vagn Fabritius & Gert Mosdal
Meteoritic iron, telluric iron and wrought iron in Greenland
1985, 52 sider Illustreret 19 x 26,5 cm
ISBN 978-87-635-1173-5
Serie:
Monographs on Greenland | Meddelelser om Grønland, vol. 242
ISSN 0025-6676
Serie:
Man & Society, vol. 9
ISSN 0106-1062
|
|
|
Vejl. pris80 DKK 12 $ 11 € 10 £
|
|
Black Friday-pris40 DKK 6 $ 5 € 5 £
|
|
|
Må du bare eje denne bog?
Man kan desværre ikke købe direkte i vores webshop lige nu da den betalingsløsning vi tidligere har anvendt, er lukket; en ny og bedre hjemmeside er under udvikling.
Indtil videre kan man bestille bøger på den gammeldags maner, ved at skrive til order@mtp.dk. Så sender vi bøgerne med en faktura.
Husk i bestillingen at angive modtagerens navn, forsendelsesadresse og mobilnummer (samt mailadresse hvis modtageren er en anden end dig selv).
Bestillinger sendes med PostNord, som udgangspunkt som pakker til afhentning i pakkeshop eller pakkeboks/nærboks; læs mere her. Hvis du behøver levering til døren eller ikke har mulighed for at hente fra pakkeboks/nærboks, så angiv også det i din bestilling.
Indholdsfortegnelse
|
▼ Din mening
▼ Kunder, som har købt denne titel, købte også
Seventyfour iron objects have been randomly selected from the Greenland archaeological material accumulated in Copenhagen since about 1850. The objects comprise knives, ulos and harpoon blades from most of West Greenland but also include several unworked fragments and some "hammerstones". The objects have been subjected to microscopic and X-ray microanalytic studies to determine their origin and mode of fabrication. The objects fall into three distinct groups. North of the Melville Bugt a majority of the tools have been produced from small fragments of the Cape York iron meteorite shower, that fell near Savigsivik more than 2000 years ago. Some of the meteoritic iron was carried across Smith Sund and as far as Hudson Bay, while transport south along the Greenland coast apparently was more sporadic. In the Disko Bugt area half of the objects may be traced to the occurrences of basalt with pea-sized iron inclusions, while the other half has been made of wrought iron. In the south all ten objects were produced from wrought iron. Some of the wrought iron tools originate from Norse settlements and have apparently been carried as far north as 76÷-77÷ by Norse ships as early as the 12th century. Other wrought iron tools have been introduced by whalers, probably mainly of Dutch, Spanish and British origin, after about 1575 A.D. Some tools may have been manufactured from iron nails, and fittings from wrecked ships. No signs of indigenous iron production have been detected.
Indlæg offentliggøres med navn og e-mail. Forlaget forbeholder sig ret til at redigere og udelade indlæg.Kunder, som har købt denne titel, købte også
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|