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Technology and Culture in the Invention of Lost-wax Casting in South America: an Archaeometric and Ethnoarchaeological Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2015

Marcos Martinón-Torres
Affiliation:
UCL Institute of Archaeology, 31–34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, UK Email: m.martinon-torres@ucl.ac.uk
María Alicia Uribe-Villegas
Affiliation:
Museo del Oro Banco de la República, Calle 16 # 5–41, Bogotá DC, Colombia Email: muribevi@banrep.gov.co

Abstract

The invention and spread of lost-wax casting in South America is not amenable to explanations based on the concepts of practical or prestige technologies. Here we propose an alternative model to explain this phenomenon, based on a combination of technical analyses of Colombian metalwork and ethnographic information. A crucial element of our argument is that we should not focus on the cast objects or the casting process only, but rather we should consider the role of wax in this innovation. We develop the claim that the use of wax may have been culturally just as important as the metals, and that perhaps metals were used in a process of transformation that required the use of wax, as opposed to wax being simply the medium to make gold objects more beautiful. The focus on wax and its symbolic role may help explain both the invention and the adoption of the new technology, thus subsuming these two categories that those studying innovations tend to separate heuristically.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research 2015 

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