Coordinating instructor: Heather Lechtman
Theme:
The characteristics of the metallurgical technologies that arose and developed
in the Andean region of South America during the prehistoric period reflect
Andean cultural attitutdes about metal as a material. Andean peoples designed
a range of alloys to exhibit certain highly valued physical, sensual properties,
such as color. The processing of these alloys also ensured the mechanical
integrity of objects made from them. Metal objects that were central to
political and ritual spheres of Andean life communicated power through
the materials of which they were made and the particular ways in which
those materials were processed.
Module program:
During the course of the module participants will explore several subject
matters. In morning sessions we will consider the salient technological
features of Andean metallurgy, the underlying cultural principles that
stamp the metallurgy and its products as typically Andean, and the physical
metallurgy behind the processing of Andean alloys as the alloys were made
into objects. We will entertain these subjects through an interplay of
lecture and informal discussion.
Participants will spend afternoon sessions in the laboratory. The laboratory
experience has two goals: (1) to demonstrate how a systematic materials-analytical
study of Andean metal artifacts by metallography, electron microscopy,
and other appropriate methods leads to the scientific characterization
of Andean metallurgy; and (2) to have participants engage in the manufacture,
processing, and property development of certain classes of Andean alloy.
Material culture component:
We will use a comparative method to identify and examine the underlying
Andean cultural attitudes and precepts that strongly affected the ways
in which indigenous metallurgies developed in the Andean region. The first
comparison will consider the major differences between the metallurgies
of the ancient Old World (western Asia, Europe) and New World (Andean
S. America). This comparison will illustrate the social arenas that stimulated
the development of metallurgy in each of these two parts of the world,
the kinds of objects people primarily made from metal, and the properties
they sought to develop in their alloys. Having established the sophistication
of these two ancient metallurgies and the distinct differences in the
social purpose of each, we will focus on characterizing Andean metallurgy.
Using materials science studies of Andean artifacts reported in the literature,
we will examine the metals and alloys that formed the backbone of the
technology, the processing regimes used to manufacture stock metal for
object fabrication, and the mechanisms used to produce metal objects that
displayed culturally required colors. A second comparison will be drawn
betweeen the principles that appear to have governed the specific ways
in which Andean peoples thought about and handled metal as a material
and the principles behind Andean cloth production. Cloth was the material
good of greatest aesthetic, political, and religious value in the ancient
Andes. This comparison, which is internal to Andean society, seeks to
discover any regularities between the ways in which people handled metal
and the ways in which they managed fibres. Both the external comparison,
with the Old World, and the internal comparison between two important
Andean materials technologies, will help locate the cultural content of
Andean materials development. We should begin to appreciate how the selective
use of certain materials and the processing of those materials imbued
metal objects with power in Andean society.
Materials science/engineering and laboratory component:
Since most Andean metal objects were made from hammered metal sheet, the
physical metallurgy component of the module will concentrate on how metals
are shaped by plastic deformation. We will consider basic crystalline
structures, especially of fcc metals, grain rotation and orientation during
deformation, the role of dislocations in slip, work hardening, annealing,
and recrystallization. Participants will become familiar with the metallic
microstructures that provide evidence for the processing sequence an artifact
has experienced during its manufacture. We will also study the phase diagram
of the copper-silver system -- the primary Andean alloy considered in
the module -- to familiarize participants with phase diagrams in general
and with eutectic systems in particular. They will learn how the surface
color of objects made by the plastic deformation of this and similar alloys
is altered during processing through mechanisms of depletion and enrichment
of near-surface alloy elements.
The laboratory: Participants will rotate through three laboratory
units. Unit 1: Basic microstructural analysis. Using metallurgical
microscopes, participants will examine sections prepared from (a) non-ferrous
metals/alloys whose microstructures exhibit the characteristic features
of plastically deformed metal; and (b) Andean artifacts made from the
alloys presented in the module. These artifacts underwent surface enrichment
and color alteration during their elaboration, and evidence of these procedures
are present in their microstructures. Unit 2: Basic extractive metallurgy.
This unit gives participants an opportunity to direct smelt copper ores
with charcoal, producing copper metal. The unit will be carried out in
the DMSE foundry. Unit 3: Plastic deformation and surface depletion
of copper-silver alloys. Participants will sand cast copper-silver
alloy ingots. They will hammer, anneal, and pickle the material as they
fashion it into sheet. They will observe the change in suface color of
the metal, from pink to silver, during processing. The unit will be carried
out in the DMSE forge.