Six Newly Discovered Bronze Age Mines in Spain May Explain the Origin of Scandinavian Bronze
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Six Newly Discovered Bronze Age Mines in Spain May Explain the Origin of Scandinavian Bronze


The survey took place between 9 and 16 February in the area around Cabeza del Buey in the province of Badajoz. The work was carried out in collaboration with the Universidad de Sevilla and archaeologists from the Museo Arqueológico Provincial de Badajoz.

In total, six Bronze Age mining sites were documented, ranging from smaller extraction areas to more substantial mining environments. Particularly remarkable was one mine where approximately 80 grooved stone axes were discovered—tools used to crush and process ore.

The mines contain copper, lead, and silver—metals that were central to Bronze Age economies and long-distance trade networks.

The background to the survey lies in previous research within Maritime Encounters and several research/archaeology projects led by Professor Johan Ling at the university of Gothenburg. Through lead isotope and chemical analyses of Scandinavian Bronze Age artefacts, researchers have previously demonstrated that much of the metal likely originated in southwestern Spain.

“The newly discovered Bronze Age mines identified over the past ten years – both by other research teams and through the approximately 20 new mines documented by our research group between 2024 and 2026 – are transforming our understanding of how interconnected Europe was already 3,000 years ago. These discoveries demonstrate that metal extraction in southwestern Europe was far more extensive and organized than previously recognized, and they provide a concrete archaeological context for the chemical and isotopic analyses that point to long-distance connections during the Bronze Age“, says Johan Ling, Professor of Archaeology.

Contact:
Johan Ling, Professor of Archaeology, University of Gothenburg, Phone: +46(0)702 494 574, E-mail: johan.ling@archaeology.gu.se

Facts/ The Extremadura Survey
  • Location: Area around Cabeza del Buey, Province of Badajoz, Spain
  • Dates: 9–16 February
  • Project: Maritime Encounters
  • Partners: Universidad de Sevilla and Museo Arqueológico Provincial de Badajoz
  • Result: Six previously unregistered Bronze Age mines
  • Notable find: Approximately 80 grooved stone axes used for ore processing
  • Metals: Copper, lead, and silver
Fichiers joints
  • 80 stone mining hammers. Approximately 80 stone mining hammers documented at one of the smaller mines. These tools were used to crush and process copper- and lead-bearing ore.
  • Large mining complex (approx. 200 x 50 m) One of the largest newly recorded mining areas, extending approximately 200 x 50 meters. The scale shows intensive and coordinated Bronze Age extraction.
Regions: Europe, Sweden, Spain
Keywords: Humanities, Archaeology

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