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6000yr old, lost cast waxing in Pak

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Revealed: 6,000-year-old amulet was created with ancient technology that is STILL used by Nasa today
  • Ornament was first discovered at Neolithic village of Mehragarh, Pakistan
  • New imaging techniques reveal how the artefact was made
  • Lost-wax casting is a method for making duplicate metal objects
  • Modern version of the process - known as 'investment casting' was used in components for ISS, Curiosity Mars rover and various spacecraft
By LIBBY PLUMMER FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 13:34 GMT, 16 November 2016 | UPDATED: 18:01 GMT, 16 November 2016




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An ancient amulet has been shown to be the oldest known example of a metalwork technique still used by Nasa.

The 6,000-year-old amulet, originally discovered in the Neolithic village of Mehragarh, Pakistan, is thought to be the earliest example of lost-wax casting - a method for making duplicate metal objects.

The artefact was analysed as part of a new study using a technique known as 'photoluminescence imaging' in order to determine exactly how it was made.

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The 6,000-year-old amulet, originally discovered in the Neolithic village of Mehragarh, Pakistan, is thought to be the earliest example of lost wax casting - a method for making duplicate metal objects

WHAT IS MEHRAGARH?
Mehragarh is an archaeologial site in Pakistan, located to the west of the Indus River Valley.

It was first discovered in 1974.

It is known as one of the most important archaeological sites from the early Neolithic period.

The area was settled various times between 7000 BC and 2000 BC.

The site was excavated extensively until 1986 and then again from 2000 to 2007.

The area is known for early evidence of farming.

The local population fashioned tools using copper ore.

The amulet, which has the unassuming inventory number of MR.85.03.00.01, is one of a selection of lost-wax cast ornaments found at the site.

This involves shining a light on the artefact and then measuring the amount of light that bounces back.

As different materials reflect different amounts of light, this enabled researchers to pinpoint the exact materials used to make the amulet.

The research was carried out by researchers from Ipanema - a European centre for studying archaeological materials.

The group is based at the SOLEIL synchrotron - a type of particle accelerator, located near Paris, France.

The process revealed that the amulet was cast as a single piece, leading the researchers to conclude that it was made used a process known as lost-wax casting.

This involves creating a replica of the original object using wax, and then creating a mold around it.

This is then heated up, the liquid wax poured out and molten metal poured in.

Once cool, the mold is broken apart, leaving the newly formed metal object in tact.


The amulet is one of several lost-wax cast ornaments discovered during the excavation of the site at Mehrgarh

The study published in Nature, found that the amulet was made by pouring very pure copper melt into a pre-prepared clay mould using lost-wax casting.

The copper absorbed a small amount of oxygen during the processing which explains the presence of microscopic copper oxide 'bristles' inside the amulet.

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High spatial dynamics photoluminescence (PL, top) and optical microscopy (bottom) images of an area of a portion of one spoke of the wheel-shaped amulet. The images reveal microscopic copper oxide bristles that hint at how the artefact was made


6,000-year-old amulet was created with ancient technology used by Nasa
















Lost-cost waxing can be used to produce far more complicated designs that the wheel-shaped amulet.

It is still the most popular method used for art foundry today but its use stretches much further.

'It is also today the highest precision metal forming technique— under the name ‘investment casting’—in aerospace, aeronautics and biomedicine, for high-performance alloys from steel to titanium,' explain the researchers.

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The archaeological site at Mehragarh in Pakistan where the amulet was found

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The amulet was found at Mehragarh - an archaeologial site in Pakistan, located to the west of the Indus River Valley

The technique has been used to create numerous components used on the International Space Station and the Curiosity Mars rover, as well as Nasa's now-defunct space shuttle.

The process was also used to create parts of the Messenger spacecraft, which orbited Mercury between 2011 and 2015.

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A modern version of the technique - known as ‘investment casting' - has been used to produce numerous components on the Curiosity Mars Rover (illustration pictured), the international space station and various spacecraft
 
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I think the modern technique known as investment casting is closely related to it (which I studied as part some course in manufacturing processes). Investment casting is used for making delicate parts like jewellery etc.
 
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It's LOST WAX METHOD or LOST WAX CASTING not lost cast waxing. It's a manufacturing technique which is used even today to make many items.
 
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It's LOST WAX METHOD or LOST WAX CASTING not lost cast waxing. It's a manufacturing technique which is used even today to make many items.
originally invented by hindus to cast idols of gods and godesses. the nataraja bronze idols are done same way even today in and around chennai. talk about continuing civilization...
 
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NASA still making the most of 6,000-year-old amulet discovered in Pakistan
By Suhail Yusuf
Published: November 18, 2016
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The image of the 6,000 years old amulet was discovered from Mehrgarh. PHOTO COURTESY: D. Bagault, C2RMF

KARACHI: A small amulet discovered from the ruins of Mehrgarh, an archaeological site in Balochistan, has been declared as the oldest known lost-wax cast object and its technology is still being used in the world, including by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa), to manufacture different metallic objects.

According to a paper published in Nature Communications – a well-cited primary research journal – the wood-wheel-shaped amulet is the first ever example of “lost-wax casting” still in practice.

The imperfect shaped amulet looks green and rusty and was discovered in 1985 by Jean-François Jarrige, a French archaeologist who uncovered a Neolithic Mehrgarh site located near Sibi. But the discovery remained in the dark until it was shined by state-of-the-art lighting and imaging techniques.

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The image shows the remains of mysterious Mehrgarh located near Sibi, Balochistan. PHOTO COURTESY: C. Jarrige, Mission archéologique de l’Indus

By analysing the light bounce back from the 2cm-wide amulet, physicist Mathieu Thoury from the French Synchrotron, and his colleagues concluded that the object was carved in a single piece, adding that they did not find any soldering parts even at the joints of the rods. Scientists observed the emitting lights from the amulet shows it was made by pure copper melted at 1,085 degrees Centigrade.

The lost wax casting method

Mehrgarh’s craftsmen used a simple but innovative way to mold the metals in their desired shape.

First they made a copy of the object with any material having low melting point, most probably a lump of beeswax; encased it in a soft clay to form a mold, which was then heated or baked to harden.

Neglected archeological sites

Finally, the molted metal, such as copper, was poured which melted the wax replaced the metal. After the cooling process and smashing the clay model, they got their once piece metal object.

This process is also called “investment casting” and is still used in making of delicate jewellery and small parts of space crafts.

With some advancement, the process was also used to create parts of the Messenger spacecraft which orbited Mercury between 2011 and 2015. It is also used to make numerous metallic parts of the International Space Station.

Speaking to Express News, the key author of the paper, Mathieu Thoury, said: “It is a first discovery which shows the major metallurgy method of lost-wax cast and may have been adopted by other civilisations later on – such as Mesopotamia.”

According to the author, the amulet was carved from pure copper found in native areas.

Mehrgarh – the home of innovation

Mehrgarh was a remarkable site where according to some reports, first-ever dentists were found, and cotton was weaved for the first time.

In April 2006, a team of French scholars revealed that the Stone Age man used flint drills for boring teeth some 9,000 years ago.

French archaeologist Christophe Moulherat and his colleague analysed a total of 11 drilled teeth collected from a Mehrgarh graveyard.

In 2002, Moulherat discovered several threads preserved by mineralisation, which are the earliest known examples of cotton thread. The cotton fibres were preserved in copper beads and the study suggested that Mehrgarh was a home for textile making.

Sadly, much of the part of this important site has been destroyed due to tribal clashes.

The writer is a Features Editor at the Express News web desk
 
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Originally invented by polytheists who had jack to do with say ancient Tamils or any of the southeners .Kudos
I don't know whether you know or not, but the original polytheists a.k.a hindus settled from present day afghanistan to kanyakumari. For example, Indus valley artifacts ahve been found as far south as Sembiyankandiyur in TN. sorry for you..
 
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