Early-Dynastic tables from Southern Mesopotamia, or the multiple facets of the quantification of surfaces
Christine Proust (SPHERE)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Early Dynastic Mesopotamian tablets to understand how ancient scribes quantified surfaces, revealing varied methods influenced by surface size and the emergence of mathematical concepts.
Contribution
It uncovers the diverse methods used for surface measurement in early Mesopotamian tablets and their relation to land surveying and mathematical development.
Findings
Different surface quantification methods based on size
Influence of metrological systems on calculation methods
Emergence of new mathematical concepts for surfaces
Abstract
How were surfaces evaluated before the invention of the sexagesimal place value notation in Mesopotamia? This chapter examines a group of five tablets containing tables for surfaces of squares and rectangles dated to the Early Dynastic period (ca. 2600-2350 BCE) and unearthed in southern Mesopotamia. In order to capture the methods used by ancient scribes to quantify surfaces, special attention is paid to the layout and organization of the tables, as well as to the way in which measurement values are written down. It is argued that these methods vary according to the dimensions of the squares or rectangles concerned: the quantification of small surfaces does not use the same mathematical tools as the quantification of large parcels of land. The chapter shows a reciprocal influence between the metrological systems adopted by the ancient scribes and the methods of calculation of surface…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Theory of Mathematics · Ancient Egypt and Archaeology · Historical Astronomy and Related Studies
