The Mesopotamian civilization  emerged   during the period 3700–2900 BCE amid the development of  technological   innovations such as the plough, sailing boats and copper  metal  working.  Clay tablets with pictographic characters appeared in  this  period to  record commercial transactions performed by the  temples.[10]   Clay  receptacles known as bullae (Latin: 'Bubble'), were  used in  Elamite city  of Susa which contained tokens. These receptacles  were  spherical in  shape and acted as envelopes, on which the seal  of  the  individuals  taking part in a transaction were engraved. The symbols  of  the tokens  they contained were represented graphically on their   surface, and the  recipient of the goods could check whether they   matched with the amount  and characteristics expressed on the bulla once   they had received and  inspected them. The fact that the content of   bulla  was marked on its  surface produced a simple way of checking   without destroying the  receptacle, which constituted in itself an   exercise in writing that,  despite being born spontaneously as a support   for the existing system  for controlling merchant goods, ultimately   became the definitive  practice for non-oral communication. Eventually,   bullae  were replaced  by clay tablets, which used symbols to represent   the tokens.
 During the Sumerian period, token envelop accounting was replaced by flat clay tablets impressed by tokens that merely transferred symbols. Such documents were kept by scribes, who were carefully trained to acquire the necessary literary and arithmetic skills and were held responsible for documenting financial transactions.[15] Such records preceded the earliest found examples of cuneiform writing in the form of abstract signs incised in clay tablets, which were written in Sumerian by 2900 BCE in Jemdet Nasr. Therefore "token envelop accounting" not only preceded the written word but constituted the major impetus in the creation of writing and abstract counting.
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