4.0 Article

The Lavrion silver district: Reassessing its ancient mining history

Journal

GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 617-642

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/gea.21852

Keywords

copper; Lavrion; oxidation; silver; third contact

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Lavrion was a significant silver mining district in the ancient world, crucial for the availability of silver, lead, and copper in Greece and the Aegean. Reassessment of its mineralization and ancient mining history sheds light on its wealth generation capacity and impact on Athens, especially the differences in mineralization at the upper and lower contacts. Discovery of concealed bonanza mineralization at Kamariza had lasting impacts on Lavrion and Athens, most likely funding the trireme fleet that led to victory over the Persians at Salamis in 480 BC.
Lavrion was an important silver mining district in the ancient world, exploited almost continuously from the fourth millennium BC. Its mining history is central to understanding the availability of silver, lead and copper in Greece and the Aegean through the Bronze age. This history is also relevant to the phenomenal rise of Athens in the 5th century BC. Our reassessment of the mineralisation and ancient mining history at Lavrion provides a clearer understanding of its capacity to generate wealth and the scale of its impact on Athens. Integration of new geochemical and geological data with existing information has produced outcomes that help address these two issues. Foremost is the contrasting character of mineralisation at the upper 'first' and lower 'third' contacts and their marked differences in silver content, spatial distribution and supergene alteration. Discovery of the concealed, bonanza mineralisation of the third contact at Kamariza, possibly early in the 5th century BC, followed about 3000 years of mining, which appears to have been largely restricted to discontinuous, low-grade mineralisation at the first contact. Undoubtedly, this later discovery had enduring impacts on Lavrion and Athens, and it most likely funded the trireme fleet, which brought victory over the Persians at Salamis in 480 BC.

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