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Artifacts Discovered In Kerala Reveal Knowledge Of Advanced Metallurgical Technology

MessageToEagle.com – Several artifacts unearthed from a courtyard of a house at Vellakunnu, near Panoor, in Kannur district, north Kerala reveal knowledge of advanced metallurgical technology.

A burial urn along with three bowls and a metal artifact are expected to provide new insights into the megalithic times in the region.

The 90-cm-high urn has a ceramic lid with a diameter of 77 cm in the middle. “One remarkable peculiarity of this burial jar is the presence of a globular copper oblique bronze piece inside it,” says N.K. Ramesh, an anthropologist-cum-archaeologist, who is working as senior assistant at the Museum Project, Department of Cultural Heritage Studies, Thunchathu Ezhuthachan Malayalam University, Tirur.

The bowls and a metal artefact — vestiges of a bygone age — discovered from the courtyard of a house at Vellakunnu, near Panoor, in Kannur.

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N.K. Ramesh points out it the first time a globular copper oblique bronze has been discovered in the megalithic context in the State. “Similar type of evidence has been discovered at Aathichanallur, an archaeological site in Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu. Probably, the relic might have been a sacred one, used for the worship by megalithic people,” he says.

The metal artefact has seven antenna-like projections on the top and morphology of the object testifies that it is a product of an advanced metallurgical technology. “Likewise, six terracotta hooks were found inside the neck of the urn, used either for hanging or suspending articles.

Bone features and river sand were also detected inside the urn. An excavation has been planned at the site,” he adds. A group of children playing in the courtyard of the house of Mangalassery Govindan spotted a hole and subsequently the jar was exposed.

The column – made up of 98% wrought iron of impure quality – not in any way welded together – seems to have been forged as a single, gigantic piece of iron.

Metallurgy reached an advanced level in ancient India. Smelting of metals and derivation of alloys was done since 3000 BCE in ancient India. In the exchanges of goods between India, Egypt and Rome, metal trade from India was significant. Indian tools made from iron and steel were in great demand for war as well as agriculture.

Records show that the first supplies of the weapons that figure in the earliest recorded history of the people of Mediterranean came from India. The most outstanding examples of the capability and workmanship of Indian artisans include the famous Iron pillar at Delhi.

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