PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How a 3000-year-old copper smelting site could be key to understanding the origins of iron

Research from Cranfield University sheds new light onto the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, showing how experimentation with iron-rich rocks by copper smelters may have sparked the invention of iron.

2025-09-26
(Press-News.org) Research from Cranfield University sheds new light onto the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, showing how experimentation with iron-rich rocks by copper smelters may have sparked the invention of iron.

The work reanalysed metallurgical remains from a site in southern Georgia: a 3000-year-old smelting workshop called Kvemo Bolnisi. During the original analysis in the 1950s, piles of hematite (an iron oxide mineral) and slag (a waste product of the metal production) were found in the workshop. Finding those iron oxides, the original excavators thought the workshop was an early iron smelting site.

However, new research shows that those assumptions were wrong. Rather than iron, workers at Kvemo Bolnisi were smelting copper using iron oxide as a flux - a substance added into the furnace to increase the resulting copper yield.

These discoveries give weight to a long-discussed theory that iron was invented by copper smelters. This evidence shows that ancient copper metalworkers experimented with iron-bearing materials in a metallurgical furnace, which was a crucial step towards iron smelting.

The importance of iron

While the Iron Age marked the beginnings of widespread iron production, the metal itself wasn’t a new discovery. Iron artefacts have been found dating from the Bronze Age, most famously an iron dagger with a gold and rock crystal hilt from the tomb of Egyptian king Tutankhamun. But the earliest iron objects were forged from naturally occurring metallic iron found in meteorites, not extracted from iron ore through smelting. That rarity meant iron was, at that point in history, more valuable than gold.

The development of extractive iron metallurgy changed all this. Iron is one of the most abundant elements on Earth, even though naturally occurring iron metal is very rare. The ability to extract iron from iron ore and work it into useful materials such as tools or weapons is one of the defining technological transformations in human history. The transition into the Iron Age was far from instantaneous, but it gave rise to the iron-wielding armies of Assyria and Rome and later the railroads and steel-frame buildings of the industrial revolution.

Dr Nathaniel Erb-Satullo, Visiting Fellow in Archaeological Science at Cranfield University, said: “Iron is the world’s quintessential industrial metal, but the lack of written records, iron’s tendency to rust, and a lack of research on iron production sites has made the search for its origins challenging.

“That’s what makes this site at Kvemo Bolnisi so exciting. It’s evidence of intentional use of iron in the copper smelting process. That shows that these metalworkers understood iron oxide - the geological compounds that would eventually be used as ore for iron smelting - as a separate material and experimented with its properties within the furnace. Its use here suggests that this kind of experimentation by copper-workers was crucial to development of iron metallurgy.

“There’s a beautiful symmetry in this kind of research, in that we can use the techniques of modern geology and materials science to get into the minds of ancient materials scientists. And we can do all this through the analysis of slag—a mundane waste material that looks like lumps of funny-looking rock.”

The research was supported by grants from the British Institute of Ankara, the Gerda Henkel Foundation, and the American Research Institute of the South Causcasus. The research paper Iron in copper metallurgy at the dawn of the Iron Age: Insights on iron invention from a mining and smelting site in the Caucasus is published in the Journal of Archaeological Science. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2025.106338

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Carnegie Mellon researchers make designer biobots from human lung cells

2025-09-26
A brand-new engineering approach to generate “designer” biological robots using human lung cells is underway in Carnegie Mellon University’s Ren lab. Referred to as AggreBots, these microscale living robots may one day be able to traverse through the body’s complex environments to deliver desired therapeutic or mechanical interventions, once greater control is achieved over their motility patterns. In new research published in Science Advances, the group provides a novel tissue engineering platform capable of achieving customizable motility in AggreBots by actively controlling their structural parameters. Biobots ...

Volumetric study shows objective effects of hyaluronic acid filler injections

2025-09-26
September 26, 2025 — Initial and follow-up 3D digital scans provide new insights into the effects of hyaluronic acid (HA) fillers in restoring facial volume and fullness, reports a study in the October issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer. "Our study combines objective measurements of volumetric effects with patient satisfaction and other subjective outcomes to provide a deeper understanding of the immediate and ...

New AI system could accelerate clinical research

2025-09-26
Cambridge, MA – Annotating regions of interest in medical images, a process known as segmentation, is often one of the first steps clinical researchers take when running a new study involving biomedical images. For instance, to determine how the size of the brain’s hippocampus changes as patients age, the scientist first outlines each hippocampus in a series of brain scans. For many structures and image types, this is often a manual process that can be extremely time-consuming, especially if the regions being studied are challenging to delineate. To streamline the process, MIT researchers developed an artificial intelligence-based ...

ITU and UNDP bring global community together to advance technology for good

2025-09-26
New York, 26 September 2025 – Digital leaders from government, the private sector and civil society, including youth representatives, shared insights on how technology can be a force for good, for people and prosperity at Digital@UNGA 2025, a week-long series of activities during the United Nations General Assembly in New York City. Digital@UNGA, organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), brought together thousands of participants through its Anchor Event at United Nations Headquarters and over 40 affiliate sessions hosted in New York, across the UN system and online ...

Meet INSEAD AI50 - An alumni-led recognition of global AI builders

2025-09-26
The INSEAD AI 50, an alum-led initiative, today announced its inaugural list recognizing 50 members of the INSEAD community who are shaping artificial intelligence across finance, healthcare, retail, climate, industrials, media and the public sector. Honorees hail from North America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, reflecting the school’s 170+ nationalities and presence in nearly 180 countries. Honorees include founders, executives, board leaders, researchers and educators who turn AI from research into responsible, scaled deployment. Anyone can view the INSEAD AI 50 at INSEADAI50.com. “INSEAD leaders focus on tangible outcomes customers ...

A mother’s death during or after pregnancy may increase risk of infant’s death or hospitalization

2025-09-26
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Friday, September 26, 2025 Contact: Jillian McKoy, jpmckoy@bu.edu  Michael Saunders, msaunder@bu.edu ##  A Mother’s Death During or After Pregnancy May Increase Risk of Infant’s Death or Hospitalization A new study found that infant mortality rates in Massachusetts were 14 times higher among babies whose mother experienced a pregnancy-associated death than among babies whose mother survived pregnancy and postpartum. ​​Global health research has long shown the devastating consequences that maternal deaths have on families and communities in developing countries where maternal mortality rates ...

Child and adolescent firearm-related homicide occurring at home

2025-09-26
About The Study: This study found that nearly one-quarter of pediatric firearm-related homicides occurred at home. Young children were more often affected. These data point to domestic violence and child abuse as significant risk factors for in-home firearm homicide. Traditional safe storage laws may be inadequate preventive measures. Extreme risk protection orders and mandatory domestic violence–related firearm relinquishment may prevent these deaths and warrant further investigation.  Corresponding ...

In-home gun homicides of children has more than doubled since 2010

2025-09-26
Nearly one-quarter of child and adolescent victims of firearm homicide were killed in their own homes from 2020-2021, including nearly two-thirds of child victims aged 12 and under, UCLA-led research finds. The findings, to be published Sept. 26 in the peer-reviewed JAMA Surgery, also found that rates of in-home firearm homicide have more than doubled among children and adolescents since 2010. They found that these cases were often linked with intimate partner violence and child abuse. Parents were the most common assailants for these homicides. These data suggest that Extreme Risk Protection ...

Wealthier countries waste more food per person, but urbanization is narrowing this gap

2025-09-26
Globally, the average person wastes around 132 kg of food per year, and this number is rising. Wealthy countries waste more food per person, but in an opinion paper publishing September 26 in the Cell Press journal Cell Reports Sustainability, agricultural economists highlight how urbanization and economic expansion are driving increases in food waste in lower- and middle-income countries. Curbing food waste will require policy and structural initiatives, they argue, such as incentivizing supermarkets and restaurants to donate food and educating consumers to promote smarter purchasing and better food storage practices.  “If left unaddressed, rising waste in middle- and ...

Medicaid billed for 52% of U.S. hospital costs from gun injuries

2025-09-26
Medicaid reimbursement often falls short of actual treatment costs, leaving trauma centers on the front lines of the gun violence epidemic to absorb substantial losses Study authors concerned Medicaid funding cuts could further strain trauma centers Costs stayed flat through 2019, then rose 33% from 2019 to 2021, coinciding with a rise in firearm injury during the pandemic CHICAGO --- The initial hospital treatment of firearm injuries cost the U.S. health care system an estimated $7.7 billion between 2016 and 2021, with the largest share falling on urban trauma center hospitals that serve the highest proportion ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UVA Engineering team develops new way to build soft robots that can walk on water

Building trust in soil carbon as a climate solution requires stronger evidence

Blockchain technology could help build trust in restaurants

New study supports gene-tailored radiation doses to treat HPV+ throat cancer

New adaptive optics to support gravitational-wave discoveries

Inactive H5N1 influenza virus in pasteurized milk poses minimal health risks

Geomagnetic disturbances caused by the Sun influence the occurrence of heart attacks, especially among women

Sylvester researchers to present findings at ASTRO 2025

Key adaptation helps nomadic people survive in extreme desert

Study: Exercise lowers risk of depression and sleep problems in older smokers

Vietnam’s food environment is changing fast. Policy needs to catch up

Study reveals roadmap for carbon-free California by 2045

How a 3000-year-old copper smelting site could be key to understanding the origins of iron

Carnegie Mellon researchers make designer biobots from human lung cells

Volumetric study shows objective effects of hyaluronic acid filler injections

New AI system could accelerate clinical research

ITU and UNDP bring global community together to advance technology for good

Meet INSEAD AI50 - An alumni-led recognition of global AI builders

A mother’s death during or after pregnancy may increase risk of infant’s death or hospitalization

Child and adolescent firearm-related homicide occurring at home

In-home gun homicides of children has more than doubled since 2010

Wealthier countries waste more food per person, but urbanization is narrowing this gap

Medicaid billed for 52% of U.S. hospital costs from gun injuries

Study reveals how a single protein rewires leukemia cells to fuel their growth

Children with chronic conditions may face higher risk of food insecurity, study suggests

Racial and ethnic disparities in occupational health

Benefit-risk reporting for FDA-cleared AI−enabled medical devices

Telestroke patients more likely to receive treatment, but with greater delays

Scientists target key parameters of MJO simulation bias to improve climate models

New hope for antidiabetic drugs: essential oil compounds from Plectranthus neochilus show promise

[Press-News.org] How a 3000-year-old copper smelting site could be key to understanding the origins of iron
Research from Cranfield University sheds new light onto the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, showing how experimentation with iron-rich rocks by copper smelters may have sparked the invention of iron.