Search results for "engineering.material"

showing 10 items of 2352 documents

A 45-year sub-annual reconstruction of seawater temperature in the Bay of Brest, France, using the shell oxygen isotope composition of the bivalve Gl…

2020

A reconstruction of sea surface temperature (SST) spanning 45 years (1966–2011) was developed from δ18O obtained from the aragonitic shells of Glycymeris glycymeris, collected from the Bay of Brest, France. Bivalve sampling was undertaken monthly between 2014 and 2015 using a dredge. In total, 401 live specimens and 243 articulated paired valves from dead specimens were collected, of which 24 individuals were used to reconstruct SST. Temperatures determined using the palaeotemperature equation of Royer et al. compared well with observed SST during the growing season between 1998 and 2010 (Pearson’s correlation: p = 0.002, r = 0.760). Furthermore, a significant negative correlation was foun…

Archeology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSPGaragonite01 natural sciencesIsotopes of oxygenSclerochronologynaopecten-maximusGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcologybiologyspgStable isotope ratiohigh-resolution proxy recordsEAPtemperature reconstructionOceanographyclimate-changenorthern-hemisphere temperaturesGeology010506 paleontologygrowthforecastARAMACC_FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITNdog cocklestable isotopesengineering.materialaragonite ; climate signals ; dog cockle ; EAP ; high-resolution proxy records ; NAO ; sclerochemistry ; sclerochronology ; SPG ; stable isotopes ; temperature reconstructioneap14. Life underwaterUBO0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesGlycymerissclerochemistryvariabilityACLAragonitemarineresolutionPaleontologyatlantic subpolar gyrebiology.organism_classificationclimate signals13. Climate actionDISCOVERYNAOsclerochronologyengineeringSeawater[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyBayDog cockleThe Holocene
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The production cycle of lime-based plasters in the Late Roman settlement of Scauri, on the island of Pantelleria, Italy

2018

This paper deals with the archaeometric study of lime-based plasters found in the archaeological settlement of Scauri, located in the homonymous bay in the south-western part of Pantelleria Island. Since 1999, archaeological surveys have led to the recovery of the huge remains of a Late Roman settlement dating back to the fourth-fifth century AD. It is well known that the island of Pantelleria is entirely composed of volcanic rocks. Accordingly, the production of quicklime required calcareous rocks to be imported. Also, the selection criteria of the sandy aggregate are relevant and of interest to this study, to evaluate the achieved technological level. Within this context, a mineralogical …

ArcheologyEngineering060102 archaeologybusiness.industrySettlement (structural)Production cycle06 humanities and the artsengineering.materiallime-based plaster010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesArchaeologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Mediterranean Seaisland of Pantelleria0601 history and archaeologyarchaeometryLate Roman agebusinessSettore GEO/09 -Georis. Miner.e Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr. per l'Ambi.ed i B.Cult.0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLime
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A group of metals from the Bronze Age village of l’Arbocer (Font de la Figuera, Valencia)

2005

In this paper, we present a study of a group of cooper and bronze objects that were found by chance in the Bronze Age village of L’Arbocer (Font de la Figuera, Valencia). The main aims are the description of the objects and the results of the X Ray Fluorescence analyses. Moreover; a short fieldwork season has been carried out, which has allowed us to determine the archaeological context of the metals and to establish their connection with a possible area of metallurgical activity. The village of L’Arbocer is located on the border of the provinces of Valencia, Alicante and Albacete. This is very interesting in helping us to evaluate the presence of a possible metallurgy workshop and its chro…

ArcheologyGeographybiologyBronze AgeengineeringContext (language use)ChalcolithicBronzeengineering.materialbiology.organism_classificationArchaeologyValenciaTrabajos de Prehistoria
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The ‘grave of the Court Pit’, A rediscovered Bronze Age tomb from Carchemish

2014

This paper examines the British Museum unpublished records related to an Early Bronze (EB) Age pithos burial uncovered a century ago in the Inner Town at Carchemish. The grave, cursorily cited and variously dated (Chalcolithic, EB or even LBA) in the final reports, was described in some detail by Hogarth and Thompson; a precise dating is, however, possible today thanks to the information of paramount importance given by T. E. Lawrence who identified and took a picture of the associated finds, which was recently rediscovered in the Carchemish Archives. The pithos can be now ascribed to the third quarter of the third millennium BC and helps to confirm the recent theory according to which the …

ArcheologyHistoryHistoryVisual Arts and Performing ArtsMesopotamiaReligious studiesChalcolithicengineering.materialAncient historyArchaeologyCarchemish British Museum excavations T. E. Lawrence D. G. Hogarth EBA burial customs Euphrates Banded Ware Syrian BottlesBronze AgeengineeringBronzeSettore L-OR/05 - Archeologia E Storia Dell'Arte Del Vicino Oriente AnticoQuarter (Canadian coin)
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PHYSICO-CHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE ACQUALADRONE ROSTRUM

2011

The archaeological discovery of the Acqualadrone rostrum (an offensive naval weapon mounted on the prow at the waterline), off the Italian coast near Messina in 2008, has led to the need for scientific research in order to plan the conservation treatment of this artefact. The discovery is exceptional because of the presence of a wooden section from the original ship. This paper describes the physico-chemical characterization of a metallic and two wooden samples by inductively coupled plasma – optical emission spectroscopy, inductively coupled plasma – mass spectrometry, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, 13 C{ 1 H} cross-polarization magic angle spinning NMR spectroscopy, energy-dispe…

ArcheologyHistoryMaterials scienceMetallurgyRostrumAnalytical chemistryengineering.materialMass spectrometryArchaeological scienceengineeringMagic angle spinningBronzeFourier transform infrared spectroscopyInductively coupled plasmaSpectroscopyArchaeometry
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The Protohistoric sword from Le Gué-de-Velluire (Vendée, France): a pasticcio's history unveiled by archaeometrical research

2020

International audience; The Gué-de-Velluire sword (Vendée, France) is part of the Rochebrune collection collected during the 19 th and the 20 th centuries and now preserved in the Dobrée Museum in Nantes (Loire-Atlantique, France). The unusual shape of its hilt, its uncorroded rivets and the rather uncommon combination of a bronze grip with an iron blade made this sword an exceptional object. It has been depicted in a large number of papers since the 20 th century, but the question of its authenticity has hardly ever been tackled. New analyses performed with the support of the Dobrée Museum, the Arc'Antique laboratory and Ghent University delivered new data enabling us to discuss this delic…

ArcheologyHistorySword[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory0211 other engineering and technologiesArt historyComputed tomography02 engineering and technologyengineering.materialX-Ray Fluorescence spectroscopy01 natural sciencesTOMOGRAPHYmedicineBRONZE-AGEBronzeSWORDComputed tomography021101 geological & geomatics engineeringmedicine.diagnostic_testHistory and Archaeology010401 analytical chemistryPasticcioX-Ray Fluorescence Spectroscopy0104 chemical sciencesengineeringBlade (archaeology)Protohistory
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Electrochemical Characterization and Dating of Archaeological Leaded Bronze Objects Using the Voltammetry of Immobilized Particles

2017

Financial support from the MINECO Projects CTQ2014-53736-C3-1-P and CTQ2014-53736-C3-2-P, which are supported by ERDF funds, is gratefully acknowledged. We wish to thank the Fondo de Arte y Patrimonio of the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia; the Museu de Prehistoria of Valencia, and its director Helena Bonet and curator Jaime Vives-Ferrandiz; and the Museu Municipal of Xativa and its director Angel Velasco. We also wish to thank Dr Jose Luis Moya Lopez and Mr Manuel Planes Insausti (Microscopy Service of the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia) for technical support.

ArcheologyHistorybiologymedia_common.quotation_subject010401 analytical chemistry02 engineering and technologyArtengineering.material021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesArchaeology0104 chemical sciencesengineeringBronze0210 nano-technologyValenciamedia_commonArchaeometry
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The blue enamels in the baroque decorations of the churches of Palermo, Sicily: Fe2+-coloured glasses from lime kilns

2009

Deep blue glasses coloured by octahedral Fe 2+ cations are often reported as textbook examples of blue pigmentation. However, despite the possibility of laboratory synthesis under reducing conditions, to date there are no well-reported occurrences of their production and use in the past. A thorough historical, ethnographic, mineralogical, and chemico-physical investigation of the 'smaltini di calcara' from several baroque churches in Palermo, Sicily, has revealed that the blue enamels widely used for altar decorations in the 17th and 18th centuries are actually a unique case of ancient blue glasses pigmented by divalent iron cations in distorted octahedral coordination. This mixed-alkali gl…

ArcheologyHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectArtengineering.materialArchaeologyBaroqueengineeringLime kilnAltarGLASSDIVALENT IRONBLUE PIGMENTENAMEL BAROQUEMÖSSBAUER SPECTROSCOPYXRPDXRFICP–OESICP–MSDeep blueSettore GEO/09 -Georis. Miner.e Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr. per l'Ambi.ed i B.Cult.Limemedia_common
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Tésera celtibérica en forma de cierva procedente de

2019

Celtiberian tessera hospitalis of bronze from Burgo de Osma, Soria, Spain. It offers a deer shape and an inscription in Celtiberian language and Latin letters, which allow dating it c. 75-25 BC. Their parallels and their meaning and the text, poorly preserved, are analyzed.

ArcheologyHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectengineeringMeaning (existential)ArtBronzeengineering.materialHumanitiesmedia_commonCuadernos de Prehistoria y Arqueología
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Ceramic production at Selinunte (Sicily) during the 4th and 3rd century BCE: New archaeometric data through the analysis of kiln wastes

2018

Abstract A set of 37 overfired ceramic samples was collected from the dump of two kilns sited in the productive area FF1 in the acropolis of Selinunte (south western Sicily), being specifically active in the period 409–250 BCE. The ceramic samples were analysed by thin-section petrography and chemical analysis, with the aim to establish a valuable ‘reference group’ representative of the ceramic produced at Selinunte during the Punic phase. The petrographic and chemical analyses allowed to state that the ceramic manufactures from the kilns operating in the FF1 insula are characterized by rather homogeneous textural/compositional features. The daily-use common ware here produced is characteri…

ArcheologyKilnGeochemistryengineering.materialSiltSelinunte010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesArchaeometryArchaeological scienceCompositional reference groupPetrographyRock fragmentPlagioclase0601 history and archaeologyCeramicSicilyQuartzSettore GEO/09 -Georis. Miner.e Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr. per l'Ambi.ed i B.Cult.0105 earth and related environmental sciencesArcheology (arts and humanities)060102 archaeology06 humanities and the artsCeramicTablewareClassic and Hellenistic Agevisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringGeologyJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports
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