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Metal Age (Southeast Asia)

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In the archaeology of Maritime Southeast Asia, the Metal Age is the period between roughly 2000 and 500 years ago.[1] The internal chronology of the period is still debated, but it is often divided into 'early', 'developed' and 'proto-historic' phases.[1] Unlike in the conventional three-age system used in other parts of Eurasia, archaeologists do not divide the Metal Age into a Bronze Age and Iron Age, because bronze and iron metallurgy arrived in Maritime Southeast Asia at roughly the same time.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Szabó, Katherine; Cole, Franca; Lloyd-Smith, Lindsay; Barker, Graeme; Hunt, Chris; Piper, Philip; Doherty, Chris (2013). "The 'Metal Age' at the Niah Caves, c. 2000-500 years ago". In Barker, Graeme (ed.). Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia. Cambridge: MacDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. pp. 299–340. ISBN 978-1902937540.

Further reading

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