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The Metal: Gold

Types Of Gold

Throughout Ancient America, there were two predominant type of gold alloy used.  The first, and very common is high quality, 10 to 18kt gold.  The other is a low quality gold alloy known as "Tumbaga".

In the case of Tumbaga, after the casting was completed, the surface was treated with plant acids to leach away the copper leaving a thin film of higher grade gold that was then burnished to a bright color.  Tumbaga was rugged, but suffers more from the effects of burial and exposure to reactive ground waters, typically resulting in some metal loss and a fair amount of spalling of the surface gold revealing the underlying coppery core.  Frequently copper salt plugging of the finer details also occurs. (see below)

 

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An example of cast gold.


An example of Tumbaga

Aging Gold

Gold Discs in the Museo Nacional de Oro, Costa RicaMost pieces displayed here do not have precise contextual information, nor are they scientifically dated.  Therefore, most fall into the general range of from 500 CE (AD) to prior to the arrival of the Spanish (approximately 1500 CE).  Only where an actual date of the item can be established through context (location and strata found) or through dating will the date/age of the item be displayed.

It is rare that gold pieces can be accurately dated.  This is typically done by two means:  contextual dating - where the piece was found; or by scientific dating - based upon the material contained in/on the piece itself.

In the case of contextual dating, we rely on the location of the find.  When excavating a site, gold pieces can be found, and soil from the ground level can be dated indicating the date of the gold piece.  This is generally reliable, except where the design of the piece may strongly contradict the ground context - this occurs when an older piece was found, used, and reburied some substantial time after if was originally created.

In the case of materials dating, some material in or on the piece can be used to date the item.  In this case, the process is destructive.  That is some part of the material must be destroyed to yield the dating information.  In some cases, poorly cleaned pieces may still have organic material or soil adhering to the piece, that can be removed and used as the sample for dating.  In other cases , where a clay core was used, the original clay core if still inside the hollow body of the piece can be used.  A sample of the clay can be extracted from the inside of the piece with a minor intrusion,  and submitted for laboratory thermoluminescence analysis to determine the age of the casting.  In the case of organic materials, carbon dating is also done.

Casting Gold

Like wax-resist ceramics, gold working seems to have begun in Peru, perhaps as early as 1500 B.C. Knowledge of casting, hammering, repoussé, and inlay spread from Peru and possibly Colombia northward, passing through Panama and Costa Rica on its way to Mesoamerica, where it finally arrived in the 10th century A.D.  These same methods are still in use today for the making of fine jewelry.

The lost wax method consisted of making a wax sculpture of the item, then covering it in a ceramic outer cover, then melting and pouring out the original wax.  The gold is then poured into the ceramic and cooled.  The ceramic is then removed leaving only the gold.  Very complex figures can be created using this simple method.

The wax was typically bee's wax warmed to be pliable, then carved into the desired shape, then cooled in a river or water to harden and hold it's shape.  The clay/ceramic used to form the mold is itself wet and soft, which helps keep the wax hard, and also allowing it to better mold to the shape of the wax.  Since it is more difficult to maintain the integrity of larger pieces, often the appendages are made separately. This allows for the fine details to be created without worrying about the model being maimed or destroyed.  with separate pieces, a drop or two of molten gold can be used to solder or join pieces together.

Once the wax is fully coated with clay/ceramic, it is then "fired" (hardened) in some form of a kiln or fire - this hardens the ceramic, and liquefies the wax.  After the mold is hard, the wax has either burned away, or can be poured out of the mold, leaving it ready for the molten metal.  This leaves a hollow where the wax was inside the ceramic.  After the ceramic is cooled and ready for use.  The metal is then poured into the mold, and either temper cool by immersing it in water, or allowed to air cool.  After which, the ceramic is broken off the gold piece.  Thus both the original design in wax, and the mold are both destroyed in the process.  So each and every piece is an original and unique.  Click here to visually see how this process is done.

A variation on the lost wax method is a half cast, where the cast is open and reusable (like an ice tray).  This allows repeated use of the mold (under ideal conditions), but does not permit complex designs, since the design must be removable without breaking the mold.  In fact, the author once used a variation on this process: caved a pattern from wood, then used plain mud (as well as raw clay) as a mold - since the pattern remained intact, this was an easily repeatable production process.  While there is no factual proof that this latter process was ever used in Precolumbian times, it is nonetheless workable for simple designs.  Enigmatic stone hollows found throughout the region may also have been used in this fashion.

Also visit our Gold Information & Glossary Page »


Front View Of Lost Wax Cast Piece


Rear View Of Lost Wax Cast Piece


A Maya Gold Pottery Cast

 

Metalworking

Repoussé or repoussage is a metalworking technique in which a malleable metal (such as gold leaf) is ornamented or shaped by hammering from the reverse side.

Chasing is the opposite technique to repoussé, and the two are used in conjunction to create a finished piece.

Whilst repoussé is used to work on the reverse of the metal to form a raised design on the front, chasing is used to refine the design on the front of the work by sinking the metal. The term chasing is derived from the noun "chase", which refers to a groove, furrow, channel or indentation. The adjectival form is "chased work".

The techniques of repoussé and chasing utilize the plasticity quality of metal, forming shapes by degrees. There is no loss of metal in the process, as it is stretched locally and the surface remains continuous. The process is relatively slow, but a maximum of form is achieved, with one continuous surface of sheet metal of essentially the same thickness. Direct contact of the tools used is usually visible in the result.

Tumbaga Gold
Pre-Columbian:Metal/Gold, Pendant: Standing Shaman Figure Tumbaga, Weight 7.8 gramsHeight 2 ¼  Width 1 ¼Tumbaga was the name given by Spaniards to a non-specific alloy of gold and copper which they found in widespread use in Pre-columbian Mesoamerica.

Tumbaga is an alloy comprised mostly of gold and copper. It has a significantly lower melting point than gold or copper alone. It is harder than copper, but maintains malleability after being pounded.

Tumbaga can be treated with a simple acid, like citric acid, to dissolve copper off the surface. What remains is a shiny layer of 23-karat gold on top of a harder, more durable copper-gold alloy sheet


Use In The Americas:

Tumbaga was widely used by the pre-Columbian cultures of central America to make religious objects. Like most gold alloys, tumbaga was versatile and could be cast, drawn, hammered, gilded, soldered, welded, plated, hardened, annealed, polished, engraved, embossed, and inlaid.
The proportion of gold to copper in artifacts varies wildly; items have been found with as much as 97% gold while others instead contain 97% copper. Some tumbaga has also been found to be comprised of metals besides gold and copper, up to 18% of the total mass of the tumbaga.

In 1992, approximately 200 tumbaga bars were recovered in wreckage off Grand Bahama Island. They were composed of gold, copper, and silver plundered by the Spaniards during the conquests of Cortez and Pizarro and hastily melted into bars of tumbaga for transport across the Atlantic. Because all the metals that reached Europe were melted back into their constituent metals in Spain, the bars found in the shipwreck are the only known bars of tumbaga that remain.
It is believed that the technology for mining and working metals migrated southward from the higher cultures of Mexico down along both the Pacific and Gulf/Caribbean coasts to Costa Rica & Panama.

Myths:

Some Mormon scholars suggest that the Golden Plates from which the Book of Mormon was allegedly translated may have been made from tumbaga.

Orichalcum, the legendary metal of the island of Atlantis, is commonly held to have been a gold-copper alloy, thus fitting the same description.

One obscure reference indicates that the origin of Tumbaga, originates from the mythical landing point of the Nahuat speaking peoples on the west coast of modern day Mexico. That landing point, and resultant settlement were alleged to have been name Aztlantla (now referred to as Aztlan). That settlement was created from concentric ring islands (said to resemble their homeland) in the mangrove swamps near modern Mazatlan.

It is believed that the technology for mining and working metals then migrated southward along both the Pacific and Gulf/Caribbean coasts
 

Pre-Columbian:Metal/Gold, Shaman with Flexed Legs
An example of Tumbaga
Shows heavy copper corrosion

Pre-Columbian:Metal/Gold, Frontal Shaman Figure
An example of poor quality Tumbaga
little gold in alloy

Pre-Columbian:Metal/Gold, Pendant: Pair of Bats

Pre-Columbian:Metal/Gold, Frog-form Pendant

 

click photos to enlarge
A History Of
Ancient American Gold
"The quantity of gold they have is endless …"
—Marco Polo

During the earliest years of European expansion onto the American continents, the search for gold was one of the driving factors in the exploration and colonization of the vast lands. The existence of the two great continents was unknown in Europe until the fateful day in October 1492 when Christopher Columbus landed on an "island in the Indies," having miscalculated the circumference of the globe by about 25 percent. Columbus, a master mariner then in the service of Spain, and an avid reader, was searching for Cipangu (Japan), the island of "endless gold," about which he had read with great excitement in Marco Polo's Travels. Convinced that fabled Cipangu was not far from the small island on which he had landed, Columbus went ashore and, unfurling royal standards, claimed it for his sponsors, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain—thereby initiating what would become the vast Spanish empire in America.

Christopher Columbus in the Caribbean

The island's inhabitants greeted Columbus with curiosity. According to the journal he wrote about his voyage, he found them to be handsome and very gentle. Some wore little pieces of gold suspended from holes in their noses. Intrigued by these ornaments, Columbus attempted to learn more about the availability and quantity of the gold. He made the first inquiries into local sources, instigating the search for precious American metals that would be a major obsession of conquerors, colonists, travelers, and opportunists for centuries. As he sailed among the island of the Indies searching for the wealthy courts of Asia, Columbus asked repeatedly about gold. When, on Christmas Eve in a calm sea, his ship, the Santa Maria, ran aground, he thought he found the evidence he was seeking.

The Santa Maria was firmly stuck on the banks of an island that Columbus named Española (Hispanola). While the crew attended to the damaged vessel, local people arrived to trade bits of gold for brass hawks' bells carried by the sailors. Columbus was so cheered at the sight of the gold that the island chieftain—who wished to see him even more pleased—told the dismayed mariner that the precious metal could be found in abundance nearby and gave him an impressive mask inset with large pieces of gold. This evidence, and the prospect of much more, led Columbus to believe that the shipwreck had been providential. To Columbus, driven by the search for the wealth that would be a tangible indicator of a successful voyage, the discovery of vast quantities of gold would represent both a personal reward and a vindication of his vision.

The News in Europe

En route to Spain, Columbus wrote to the king and queen telling them of the newfound lands across the western sea and the rich islands of the Indies. In a letter amazingly brief for the magnitude of its contents, he reported that he had claimed the island for the Spanish sovereigns. He told of the innumerable peoples he had encountered; of birds, trees, exotic fruits, and plants; of the rivers that contained gold; and of mines for gold and other metals. This astonishing letter was eagerly received in Spain and initially published in Latin in the spring of 1493. By the end of the fifteenth century, it had been printed in numerous editions in various cities in Europe, where the news was disseminated quickly.

The search for gold became a predictable part of the European experience in the Americas from Columbus's day onward, despite the fact that during his second voyage he learned that there was no mine on Española. Gold mines were rare in the Americas, as the precious metal was chiefly taken from rivers and streams. Yet the notion of accessibility to great riches endured, and the search for them was compulsively pursued. Rumors of gold brought Hernán Cortés and several hundred men to Mexico in 1519. Making his much-noted trek into the interior from the Gulf Coast, Cortés heard, and followed, tantalizing tales of a powerful ruler and immense wealth.

Aztec Mexico

The ruler was the Aztec king Motecuhzoma (Montezuma II), whose capital city was Tenochtitlan, in the central highlands. Wishing to prevent the arrival of the Spaniards in his city, he sent emissaries to Cortés with extravagant gifts: a gold disk the size of a cartwheel; a silver disk of the same size; diadems, earrings, and figures of gold and mosaic; armbands of silver; multistrand necklaces with hundreds of gold beads and red and green stone; hollow gold ornaments cast in complex shapes; shields and helmets covered in turquoise mosaic; brilliant feather fans and headpieces; elaborate garments and costumes—all were among the exotic and wonderfully strange objects the Spaniards received as tribute.

Cortés sent the gifts to Spain, and in the spring of 1520 the treasure was presented to the newly elected Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, king of Spain. Great excitement greeted the wondrous objects and learned men commented upon them. No opinion is better known or valued than that of Albrecht Dürer, who saw the treasure in Brussels in August 1521. In the diary of his journey to the Netherlands (1520–21), he wrote of the gifts "brought to the King from the new golden land: a whole golden sun, a whole yard wide, likewise a whole silver moon, also equally big, likewise two chambers full of … wonderful things for various uses, that are much more beautiful to behold than things of which miracles are made."

Unfortunately, such learned interest and appreciation were of modest duration, and none of the works from this hoard is known to have survived. The cartwheels of gold and silver and all the pieces of precious metal were melted down, and objects of more ephemeral materials discarded. The same fate befell the royal treasury of the Aztecs. Cortés, far from being deterred by the rich presents he was offered, marched on to Tenochtitlan, where he imprisoned Motecuhzoma and sacked the treasury. Much of the contents went to Spain, but only a few of the most exceptional pieces reached there in the shapes made by Mexican artisans; the rest arrived as bullion.

Inka Peru

The lure of the golden cities continued, and in the mid-1520s another adventurer, Francisco Pizarro, sailing along the Pacific coast of Colombia, encountered communities with abundant gold and silver. Wishing to gain control of the region for himself, Pizarro hurried to Spain and successfully petitioned to become governor in 1529. Shortly thereafter he set out for Inka Peru, the richest of all the American kingdoms where temple walls were covered with gold and golden pots held golden treasure. Precious metals had been worked in Peru for some 3,000 years before Pizarro arrived. Personal adornment of gold—diadems, ear ornaments, pectorals—of great size and substance were produced during the first millennium, and by the sixteenth century gold and silver creations were highly imaginative and included, according to the accounts of Spanish chroniclers, miniature gardens made entirely of gold. The use of precious metals was restricted to the Inka nobility, concentrating power and wealth in royal hands. Pizarro gained access to this fortune in 1532, when he and his men ambushed the Inka ruler, Atawalpa (Atahuallpa), and held him for ransom.

The ransom was immense. In an effort to gain his freedom, Atawalpa filled a large room with gold and two rooms with silver. The rooms were stacked high with tubs of the metal, platelike tiles of gold, and many other objects. Yet this treasure did not buy freedom for Atawalpa or his kingdom. The country was stripped of its wealth, and the rich temple fixtures, a well as the precious gardens with earth of gold granules, gold cornstalks, and gold figures of men and llamas, were rendered into neat bars. Forty years after Christopher Columbus saw modest bits of gold among the peoples of Española, the dream of incredibly rich royal courts and seemingly endless supplies of gold had come true.

 

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