The Akkadian word for
silver also means money, as it was used for uncoined currency. It was also used for objects, which is how one finds most of the silver in the royal cemetery at Ur. These objects include belts, vessels, jewelry such as hair ornaments and pins, fittings for weapons, imitation cockle shells used for cosmetics, and parts of sculpture. in Ur There are very few literary references to sources for silver. It is also difficult to identify the actual origin of the silver and the mines from those areas in which the majority of trade occurred. Because silver was used as currency it is even more difficult to pinpoint an area of origination due to its vast circulation. The 'Silver Mountains' mentioned in association with the campaigns of
Sargon of Akkad are identified as the mines found at
Keban on the Upper Euphrates. Other, more generic, silver-producing areas are Aratta, Dilmun,
Elam, Marḫashi (also known as Barhashi or Parahshum) and Meluḫḫa. Some known areas in Iran containing
argentiferous lead that could have been exploited at this time are
Azerbaijan,
Kerman, and the Miyana-Zanjan region.
Anatolia, especially the mining region of Bolkardag in the
Taurus Mountains, is also well known for silver-bearing ore deposits and probably supplied most of the silver to Mesopotamia at this time. ==Lapis Lazuli==