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History of Technology 4: Bronze and Weapons 2 Views
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Description:
Bronze weapons were super pretty. So what if they corroded? ...And bent...and smooshed easily...? Huh. Okay, maybe looks aren't the only thing that matters...
Transcript
- 00:00
Shmoop! alright shmoopers brace yourselves for a surprise in the Bronze Age people
- 00:06
started making yeah bronze yeah pretty shocking we know but we [three guys standing in a living room]
- 00:12
don't see a lot of bronze hanging around these days why well because we've got
- 00:15
cooler stuff like steel and iron we won't tell our ancestors that fact
- 00:20
though it might make them feel bad kind of like our sister after she bought an [girl waving a phone in front of her brother]
Full Transcript
- 00:23
iPhone 7 the day before the iPhone 8 was announced yeah which one are they on
- 00:27
their iPhone 93 maybe s 112 anyway once people figured out how to make bronze by
- 00:33
mixing copper with tin they could make weapons and armor that were much much [a man wielding a sword near two armor chests]
- 00:37
stronger than the stone or leather they were using before this was important
- 00:42
because apparently hard metal points could kill people more reliably than
- 00:46
sharp rocks or clubs who would've thunk well bronze raised the military bar pretty military men diving under a bar]
- 00:52
high before bronze war was basically a bunch
- 00:54
of dudes fighting with clubs and rocks after bronze war was basically a bunch
- 00:59
of dudes fighting with nice equipment and training and then one guy who
- 01:03
refuses to let go of the past so come on Larry you're embarrassing your entire [a man throwing a rock at two soldiers]
- 01:07
so how exactly did people figure out that mixing tin and copper together made
- 01:12
sweet sweet bronze did some guy trip and dump his tub of molten copper into a tub [a man tripping over]
- 01:17
of tin kind of like how they invented reeces well probably not in our
- 01:22
experience most people are pretty careful when they're carrying their tubs
- 01:25
of thousand-degree molten copper so let's dig into the real explanation of [a father and son digging in a field]
- 01:30
it well before there was bronze there was copper to the untrained eye they
- 01:33
might look pretty similar they're both metally type things that
- 01:37
are kind of brownish but copper has its own thing going on it's a naturally [a piece of copper with its arms raised high]
- 01:41
occurring metal that is harder than gold or silver but way softer than iron or
- 01:46
steel seriously you should watch a rom-com with this guy such a softy well
- 01:50
the first people who used copper were just picking up lumps of it from the [people picking up copper]
- 01:54
ground and beating it into different shape how rude all they had to do is ask
- 01:58
nicely you know copper is great at yoga soon people started heating copper in
- 02:03
[a piece of copper in a red hot fire] fires and then beating it man copper can't catch a break well that
- 02:08
process of heating and cooling is called annealing and it made copper much more
- 02:13
useful it went from Ooh pretty to Ooh maybe we
- 02:17
can kill somebody with this well over the next few centuries most cultures [a darkened mine]
- 02:22
around the world had figured out how to make copper weapons like daggers maces
- 02:26
and copper arrowheads so copper was a definite improvement over stone weapons
- 02:30
but it was no miracle cure for one thing copper is weak under stress it bends [a piece of copper working out in a gym]
- 02:36
dents breaks or if you use a technical term smooshes yeah that was fine for
- 02:42
bowls and jewelry but not so great in a knife
- 02:44
it also corrodes and oxidizes quickly in the open air so there definitely weren't [assorted copper items on a table]
- 02:49
many copper daggers handed down from grandpa to little Johnny that could be
- 02:54
because grandpa's a stingy old crow though well still copper was the first step in
- 03:00
humanity's long love affair with metalworking and we still haven't broken
- 03:04
up even though metalworking doesn't call us like it should [boy using a smartphone by sunset]
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