Abstract:
he main objective of this study was to examine the design, age, and per-
formance of the ancient crucible steel furnaces found in the Yodhawewa archaeolog-
ical site, Northern dry zone of Sri Lanka. An archaeological survey and two vertical
excavations were carried out near the excess water canal of the Yodhawewa tank in
2018. This investigation is mainly based on archaeological materials such as furnace
debris, slags, crucible fragments, and burnt wood charcoal unearthed from the field
observations. According to the stratification of the entire area, two cultural layers
were located between two natural layers, mainly representing metal activities from
the c. 1st to 9th century AD. Furnace debris, slags, and crucible fragments were the
evidence of crucible steel production of there among other archaeological materials
found. An important discovery of the Yodhawewa research was the lower half-spher-
ical shape furnace used for making crucible steel. Archaeologists have so far been
unable to find in South Asia, such a furnace except at Kodumanal, a South Indian
archaeological site used for high-carbon steel production in c. 300 BC. Among the
first-millennium AD metal artifacts in the Yodhawewa site, this furnace has received
an absolute date of c. 680 ± 30 AD from the Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS)
Radiocarbon dating. Further, this is the first discovery of a furnace activated through
the "Bellow method" for making crucible steel in the Northern dry zone of Sri Lanka.
According to the size factors and structural features seen in the furnace, it can be
concluded that a steel-making crucible file (10-15) in these furnaces may have been
used at the same time. A rare model of the c. 9th century AD was selected for crucible
steel production in Sri Lanka; however, this could indicate that the ancient metal-
workers possessed the technical skills to use it sparingly.