Scientists Decipher 2,300-Year-Old Chemistry Formulas Revealing Ancient Metallurgy Was More Complex Than Previosuly Thought
Jan Bartek - AncientPages.com - Researchers have identified the ingredients in chemistry formulas from a 2,300-year-old Chinese text, revealing ancient metallurgy was more complex than expected.
The Kaogong ji was written in China around the middle of the first millennium BC and is the oldest known technical encyclopedia. It details items ranging from swords to musical instruments and how to make them, including six chemistry formulas for mixing the bronze.
Knife coins, in use in China around 400 BC, were some of those studied. Credit: The Trustees of the British Museum / CC-BY-SA 4.0
"These recipes were used in the largest bronze industry in Eurasia during this period," said Dr. Ruiliang Liu from the British Museum, "Attempts to reconstruct these processes have been made for more than a hundred years, but have failed."
Researchers had been unable to identify the two main ingredients: Jin and Xi. It was thought they were copper and tin, two key components of bronze, but recreating the recipes with them produced metal that did not match the composition of ancient Chinese artifacts.
Now, research by Dr. Liu and Professor Pollard, from the University of Oxford, may have finally identified Jin and Xi. Their work, published in the journal Antiquity, shows they were likely pre-mixed alloys.
The discovery was made whilst studying the chemical composition of Chinese coins from around the time the Kaogong ji was written. It was thought that these were made by diluting copper with tin and lead to create the desired form of bronze.
Depiction of a Chinese furnace producing copper and lead from a later text, Tian Gong Kai Wu from the Ming Dynasty. Credit: Dr. Liu
However, Professor Pollard and Dr. Liu found that the composition of the coins did not match this technique. Instead it indicated the coins were made by mixing two pre-prepared metal alloys: a copper-tin-lead alloy and a copper-lead alloy.
This shows that ancient Chinese bronze production involved the combination of alloys, rather than pure metals. As such, Professor Pollard and Dr. Liu argue that this method of making bronze was also have been what the Kaogong ji was describing and Jin and Xi refer to these pre-mixed alloys.
"For the first time in more than 100 years of scholarship, we have produced a viable explanation of how to interpret the recipes for making bronze objects in early China given in the Kaogong ji," said Professor Pollard.
As well as shedding light on the enigmatic ancient recipe, this discovery also indicates ancient Chinese metallurgy was more complex than expected.
See also: More Archaeology News
"It indicates an additional step—the production of pre-prepared alloys—in the manufacturing process of copper-alloy objects in early China," said Dr. Liu, "This represents an additional but previously unknown layer in the web of metal production and supply in China"
It also shows how science and analysis can help solve linguistic mysteries. The researchers hope further studies like this can continue to shed light on ancient texts.
Written by Jan Bartek - AncientPages.com Staff Writer
More From Ancient Pages
-
Unexpected Hero Saved The Gods And Humanity From An Evil Force – Rare Mesopotamian Myth Revealed On Ancient Sumerian Tablet
Featured Stories | May 22, 2026 -
Medieval Cemetery Unearthed By Polish Archaeologists In Sicily Belonged To The Normans
Archaeology | Jul 18, 2018 -
History Set In Stone – Maya Rulers Put Their Personal Stamp On Ancient Monuments
Archaeology | Sep 22, 2021 -
Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mother Might Have Been A Slave – Here’s What The Discovery Reveals About Renaissance Europe
Featured Stories | Mar 30, 2023 -
On This Day In History: Edict Of Milan Is Signed – Persecution Of Christians Ends – June 13, 313 AD
News | Jun 13, 2016 -
Anglo-Saxon Kings Were Mostly Vegetarians Before Vikings Settled In England
Archaeology | Apr 21, 2022 -
Bad Dürrenberg Shaman’s 9,000-Year-Old Spectacular Headdress And Another Surprising Discovery
Archaeology | Dec 12, 2025 -
Bronze Age Human Remains Uncovered In Dorset During Excavation Of Iron Age Settlement
Archaeology | Jul 10, 2023 -
Uncovering Ancient Secrets Hidden In China’s Dunhuang Caves
News | Jan 13, 2021 -
DNA Reveals The History Of Modern And Archaic Humans Is Much Longer And More Complicated Than Previously Thought
DNA | Jan 2, 2025 -
Did Lead Pollution Cause IQ Declines Among Ancient Romans?
Places | Jan 8, 2025 -
Settlement Of Europe: Result Of Several Migration Waves By A Single Population – Study
Archaeology | Jul 17, 2020 -
Mystery Of The Anglo-Saxon Burial At Lowbury Hill May Soon Be Solved
Archaeology | Mar 7, 2023 -
Monks Mound In Ancient Cahokia Was Not What Scientists Previously Thought – New Study
Archaeology | Jul 21, 2022 -
25,000 Ancient Egyptian Statues, Ushabti Figurines And Artifacts From New Kingdom Cemetery Revealed For The First Time
Archaeology | Oct 26, 2023 -
Complete Neolithic Cursus Discovered On Isle of Arran, Scotland
Archaeology | Sep 7, 2023 -
Mystery Of The Anonymous God Of Palmyra Finally Solved By Scientists
Archaeology | Jun 21, 2022 -
Prastio-Mesorotsos Excavations: Neolithic oven prepared food for 200 guests
News | Aug 30, 2015 -
Unusual Ancient Skeletons Found In Minnesota – But Some Are Not What They Seem
Archaeology | Dec 10, 2024 -
4500-Year-Old Fingerprints Reveal Children Created Pottery Vessels In Ebla Kingdom
Archaeology | Oct 16, 2024


