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<root><list-item><id>8985</id><url>http://www165.123.244.137/subject/8985/</url><title>9300A</title><control_properties><list-item><property>Object Type</property><value>Bracelets and Anklets</value><inline></inline><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><property>Museum</property><value>University of Pennsylvania Museum</value><inline></inline><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><property>Season Number</property><value>05: 1926-1927</value><inline></inline><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><property>Material</property><value>Copper Alloy</value><inline></inline><footnote></footnote></list-item></control_properties><free_form_properties><list-item><prop>U Number</prop><property_value>9300A</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Description (Catalog Card)</prop><property_value>Copper Bangles
Plain thick wire, penannular</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote>Woolley's description</footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Description (Modern)</prop><property_value>Two round wire copper alloy cuff bracelets that are corroded together.</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote>Aubrey Baadsgaard, Trends, Traditions, and Transformations: Fashions in Dress in Early Dynastic Mesopotamia (PhD diss., University of Pennsylvania, 2008).</footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Find Context (Catalog Card)</prop><property_value>TTG
PG 563</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Material (Catalog Card)</prop><property_value>Copper Alloy</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote>Material as described by Woolley</footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Museum Number (UPM B-number)</prop><property_value>B17017.1</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Measurement (Weight)</prop><property_value>29.80</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote>Aubrey Baadsgaard, Trends, Traditions, and Transformations: Fashions in Dress in Early Dynastic Mesopotamia (PhD diss., University of Pennsylvania, 2008).</footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Measurement (Depth)</prop><property_value>54</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Measurement (Width)</prop><property_value>66</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Measurement (Thickness)</prop><property_value>6</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Conservation</prop><property_value>2007. University Museum Near East Section Ur Metals Conservation Treatment Project. IMLS Grant.</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item><list-item><prop>Pseudomorph</prop><property_value>There are areas of preserved textile or matting.</property_value><inline_note></inline_note><footnote></footnote></list-item></free_form_properties></list-item></root>