homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Researchers decipher mystery ingredients in ancient Chinese recipes for bronze

Metal-making practices described in a 2300-year-old text are more sophisticated than anyone realized.

Fermin Koop
August 10, 2022 @ 5:39 pm

share Share

The 2,300-year-old Kaogong Ji is the oldest technical encyclopedia in the world. The book contains designs and instructions on how to make several highly advanced tools for the time, such as metal drums, chariots and weapons. It also has ambiguous recipes for casting bronze, whose ingredients have puzzled researchers for years. Now, they were able to finally decipher those recipes and their ingredients.

Knife coins, which were in use in China around 400 BC, were some of the objects studied as researchers deciphered ancient recipes for bronze. Image credit: The researchers.

The book was written around 300BC and is part of a longer text called The Rites of Zhou. It includes six chemistry formulas for casting bronze — copper-based alloy that typically consists of approximately 88% copper and 12% tin in modern manufacturing — and lists items such as axes and knives and instructions on how to make them. For about 100 years, researchers have struggled to decipher two of the main ingredients, listed as “jin” and “xi.”

The two words were first translated to copper and tin, which are the main components in the bronze-making process. But when researchers tried to re-create the recipes, the metal didn’t match up with the composition of ancient Chinese artefacts. Now, chemical analyses showed that jin and xi weren’t in fact copper and tin. Or not just copper and tin.

“These recipes were used in the largest bronze industry in Eurasia during this period. Attempts to reconstruct these processes have been made for more than a hundred years, but have failed,” study coauthor Ruiliang Liu and curator of the Early China Collection at the British Museum in London said in a media statement this week.

A chemical analysis

Liu and study author Mark Polland analyzed the chemical composition of a set of Chinese coins — some of which are oddly shaped like knives — that were minted close to when the Kaogong Ji was written. The coins were first believed to be made by diluting copper with tin and lead. But the new analysis showed that they were the result of mixing two pre-prepared metal alloys.

Alloys are made by mixing different metals together. The coins were made with one combination of copper, tin and lead and another alloy of copper and lead. These alloys are likely to be what the authors of the Kaogong Ji referred to as jin and xi rather than pure metals. But the recipes in the book may not reflect how bronze was usually made, the researchers explained.

“If anything, the recipes are too specific,” Liu said in a statement. “The people who actually got their hands dirty probably couldn’t read or write so they wouldn’t have been able to record the recipe. I think there is a gap in knowledge between the person who wrote the recipe and the person who did the real work.”

As well as revealing the mystery behind Chinese bronze-making, a better definition of the two words could help researchers decipher other Chinese historical texts, such as those covering ancient metallurgy from different cultures and regions in the future.

The study was published in the journal Antiquity.

share Share

A Former Intelligence Officer Claimed This Photo Showed a Flying Saucer. Then Reddit Users Found It on Google Earth

A viral image sparks debate—and ridicule—in Washington's push for UFO transparency.

This Flying Squirrel Drone Can Brake in Midair and Outsmart Obstacles

An experimental drone with an unexpected design uses silicone wings and AI to master midair maneuvers.

Oldest Firearm in the US, A 500-Year-Old Cannon Unearthed in Arizona, Reveals Native Victory Over Conquistadores

In Arizona’s desert, a 500-year-old cannon sheds light on conquest, resistance, and survival.

No, RFK Jr, the MMR vaccine doesn’t contain ‘aborted fetus debris’

Jesus Christ.

“How Fat Is Kim Jong Un?” Is Now a Cybersecurity Test

North Korean IT operatives are gaming the global job market. This simple question has them beat.

This New Atomic Clock Is So Precise It Won’t Lose a Second for 140 Million Years

The new clock doesn't just keep time — it defines it.

A Soviet shuttle from the Space Race is about to fall uncontrollably from the sky

A ghost from time past is about to return to Earth. But it won't be smooth.

The world’s largest wildlife crossing is under construction in LA, and it’s no less than a miracle

But we need more of these massive wildlife crossings.

Your gold could come from some of the most violent stars in the universe

That gold in your phone could have originated from a magnetar.

Ronan the Sea Lion Can Keep a Beat Better Than You Can — and She Might Just Change What We Know About Music and the Brain

A rescued sea lion is shaking up what scientists thought they knew about rhythm and the brain