Date: 30/03/2015 21:52:37
From: Michael V
ID: 700906
Subject: Isotope Geology applied to Tudor History.

Interesting cross-discipline work…

Anne-Marie Desaulty and Francis Albarede Copper, lead, and silver isotopes solve a major economic conundrum of Tudor and early Stuart Europe Geology, February 2013, v. 41, p. 135-138

Abstract

The unrelenting economic inflation of A.D. 1515–1650 in Europe has been variously explained by the influx of silver from Mexico and the Viceroyalty of Peru (now Bolivia), the growth of the European population, and the decline of the silver market price. Silver, copper, and lead isotope analyses of A.D. 1550–1650 English coinage show a dominance of silver from Europe and Mexico, contrasting with a spectacularly small contribution from the Viceroyalty of Peru.

This observation contrasts with the registration of metal production in the mines of the Spanish Americas. Hence the question: Where did Potosí silver go? This novel observation indicates that silver from Mexico was exported eastward, whereas Potosí silver flowed westward. However, aware of the Pacific route of the silver trade, scholars never agreed upon the volumes transported.

Our work demonstrates that there was a Potosí-China route, and that it was largely disconnected from the Mexico-Europe routes.

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Date: 30/03/2015 21:55:08
From: party_pants
ID: 700907
Subject: re: Isotope Geology applied to Tudor History.

interesting.

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Date: 30/03/2015 22:13:31
From: AwesomeO
ID: 700924
Subject: re: Isotope Geology applied to Tudor History.

I hate to think how many beautiful works of art were melted down by the empire of Spain. And the feather cloaks have dissapeared as well. They were probably more valuable than silver and gold sculptures.

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Date: 30/03/2015 22:22:46
From: wookiemeister
ID: 700926
Subject: re: Isotope Geology applied to Tudor History.

there’s some Japanese business dancing around infront of a mirror in one of those feather jackets I bet

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Date: 30/03/2015 23:06:10
From: diddly-squat
ID: 700935
Subject: re: Isotope Geology applied to Tudor History.

AwesomeO said:


I hate to think how many beautiful works of art were melted down by the empire of Spain. And the feather cloaks have dissapeared as well. They were probably more valuable than silver and gold sculptures.

It’s amazing how much history has been destroyed by ignorance

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