metallurgy
Art History
World History
(noun)
The scientific and mechanical technique of working with bronze. copper, and tin.
Examples of metallurgy in the following topics:
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Metallurgy
- Extractive metallurgy is the study of the processes used in the separation and concentration of raw materials.
- Extractive metallurgy is the practice of removing valuable metals from an ore and refining the extracted raw metals into a purer form.
- The practice of extractive metallurgy almost always involves contributions from other scientific fields, such as analytical chemistry and mineralogy.
- Sometimes extractive metallurgy produces a finished product, but more often it produces a form that requires further physical processing.
- The field of extractive metallurgy encompasses many specialty sub-disciplines, each concerned with various physical and chemical processes that are steps in an overall process to produce a particular material.
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Extractive Metallurgy
- Extractive metallurgy refers to the different processes used to extract valuable metals from mined ores.
- Extractive metallurgy is the practice of removing valuable metals from an ore and refining the extracted raw metals into a purer form.
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Bronze Age Advancements in Metallurgy
- An important development of the Bronze Age was the evolution of metallurgy, which resulted in the discovery of bronze.
- The first evidence of this extractive metallurgy dates to Serbian sites from the fifth and sixth millennia BCE.
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Introduction to Provisioning
- Wrights' powered flight depended on the existence of internal combustion engines, bicycles, fabric, gliders, metallurgy, and a host of other items.
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Mycenaean Metallurgy
- List the items found in Mycenaean burial sites that demonstrate Mycenaean skill in metallurgy.
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How successful are eco-industrial parks?
- (Jyrki, Heino, and Tuomo, Koskenkari, ‘Industrial Ecology in the Metallurgy Industry: The Harjavalta Industrial Ecosystem') Eco-industrial parks, it seems, have staying power.
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Archaeology
- Archaeology also sheds light on many of humanity's technological advances, such as the ability to use fire, the development of stone tools, the discovery of metallurgy, the beginnings of religion and the creation of agriculture.
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Ceramics and Bronze in the Yayoi Period
- Techniques in metallurgy based on the use of bronze and iron were also introduced to Japan in this period.
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Art of the Bronze Age
- This period ended with further advancements in metallurgy, such as the ability to smelt iron ore.
- The Bronze Age in Ireland commenced around 2000 BCE, when copper was alloyed with tin and used primarily in the field of metallurgy.
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Indus Valley Civilization
- Inhabitants of the ancient Indus Valley developed new and notable techniques in handicraft, metallurgy, trade and transportation, systems of measurement, and urban planning.