The Graeco-Roman economy in the super long-run: lead, copper, and shipwrecks
@article{deCallata2005TheGE, title={The Graeco-Roman economy in the super long-run: lead, copper, and shipwrecks}, author={François de Callata{\"y}}, journal={Journal of Roman Archaeology}, year={2005}, volume={18}, pages={361 - 372} }
16 Citations
Landscape Change and Trade in Ancient Greece: Evidence from Pollen Data
- History, Economics
- 2020
In this paper we use pollen data from a number of sites in southern Greece and Macedonia to study long-term vegetation change in these regions from 1000 BCE to 600 CE. Based on insights from…
Lead isotope evidence of lead supply in ancient Ilduro (second-first centuries B.C.E.)
- HistoryArchaeological and Anthropological Sciences
- 2020
In this article, we study the provenance of the lead contained in 22 objects found in the excavations conducted since 1998 on the ancient site of Ilduro (Cabrera de Mar, Barcelona), located in the…
Reconstruction of mining activities in the Western Alps during the past 2500 years from natural archives.
- Environmental ScienceThe Science of the total environment
- 2020
Radiopurity of an archaeological Roman lead cryogenic detector
- PhysicsThe European Physical Journal A
- 2019
Abstract.Archaeological Roman lead (Pb) is known to be a suitable material for shielding experimental apparata in rare event searches. In the past years the intrinsic radiopurity of this material was…
Lead pollution recorded in Greenland ice indicates European emissions tracked plagues, wars, and imperial expansion during antiquity
- History, Environmental ScienceProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- 2018
The results indicate sustained economic growth during the first two centuries of the Roman Empire, terminated by the second-century Antonine plague.
The Antonine Constitution
- History
- 2018
In The Antonine Constitution , Alex Imrie approaches the famous edict of AD 212 from a number of angles, offering an assessment of its author’s rationale that is firmly embedded in the dynamic period…
Agents and commodities: a response to Brughmans and Poblome (2016) on modelling the Roman economy
- History
- 2017
This article responds directly to Brughmans and Poblome's (2016a) recent application of agent-based modelling to explore the relative integration of the Roman economy. The response will not only be…