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7: Cuneiform Writing on River Clays in Old Babylonia, 3,800 BP

  • Page ID
    46485
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    • 7.1: Reading/Media
      Human writing system is believed to have been born in ancient Mesopotamia as cuneiform inscription on river-deposited clays. A collection of cuneiform artefacts from ancient Mesopotamia are examined here for their making process and mineralogical origin.
    • 7.2: Classroom Activity
      This Classroom Activity presents the use of X-ray diffraction (XRD) for identifying minerals in clay artefacts. It explains X-ray scattering on crystal atomic planes and the application of Bragg's law to calculate lattice spacing. The analysis focuses on two samples and distinguishes between silicates, clays, and carbonates to identify common minerals and those affected by thermal treatment.
    • 7.3: Assignment
      This Assignment explores ancient Mesopotamian culture, highlighting cuneiform inscriptions on clay tablets that documented a range of information. It covers clay drying and preservation methods, the geographic significance of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and the evolution of writing from pictographs to ideographs driven by efficiency.


    This page titled 7: Cuneiform Writing on River Clays in Old Babylonia, 3,800 BP is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Likwan Cheng.