An ITV schools programme.
Using the methods of reenactment, time markers and maps, and by visiting current day locations, presenter Oliver McGilloway tells the story of Ireland's Metal Age history. Continuing from the previous episode, which focused on the Stone Age, we here begin in County Tyrone, in the Sperrin Mountains, before moving on to the Beaghmore stone circles (c.2000 BC).
The Bronze Age people were very skilled at making weapons and ornaments out of copper. However, the process by which the final product is created is long. McGilloway guides us through the steps; first, find a rock face not covered in soil or plants, next, look for the green colour of the rock which signals it contains copper. Then, in order to access the copper, a large bonfire is lit next to the rock and splashed with water to split the rock. Stone hammers are then used to smash the rock into smaller pieces. It is all then melted at high temperatures and tin is mixed in, to make it a tougher metal unti, finally, it becomes bronze. Due to this lengthy process, the bronze age people traded metal tools and accessories for food and clothing.
The programme ends with a look ahead to the next episode, and the coming of the iron age (around 2,200 years ago) and the rising influence of the Celts.