Loading…

Non-invasive reflection FTIR characterization of archaeological burnt bones: Reference database and case studies

[Display omitted] •Total reflection FTIR spectroscopy is suitable technique for characterisation of cremated bones.•Degradation products of thermally degraded bones have been non-invasively characterised.•A non-invasive reflection FTIR spectral database on temperature dependent bones’ spectral respo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of cultural heritage 2020-01, Vol.41, p.13-26
Main Authors: Legan, Lea, Leskovar, Tamara, Črešnar, Matija, Cavalli, Fabio, Innocenti, Dario, Ropret, Polonca
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:[Display omitted] •Total reflection FTIR spectroscopy is suitable technique for characterisation of cremated bones.•Degradation products of thermally degraded bones have been non-invasively characterised.•A non-invasive reflection FTIR spectral database on temperature dependent bones’ spectral response was created.•Approximate burning temperature of cremated human remains from different Slovenian archaeological sites was estimated. To better understand and interpret archaeological bone remains, knowledge of thermally induced changes that can be a consequence of cooking or mortuary practices in past cultures are of extreme importance. Due to the high value of the remains, the methods that require no sampling or no sample manipulation should deserve special attention. For that purpose non-invasive spectroscopic analytical research has been carried out on experimentally heated bones to examine their chemical composition, which may represent a starting point for understanding the conservation status of heated bones and the effects of temperature on the detected chemical changes. Total reflection FTIR spectra collected on experimentally heated bones were due to competition of specular and diffuse reflectance phenomena distorted. In the lower spectral region, where specular reflection prevails, the Kramers–Kronig (KK) operation was applied. Derivative-like bands were successfully corrected with the KK operation. However, the most significant band of νs (PO43−) was inverted by the reststrahlen effect in almost all reflection spectra wherein the KK operation fails. Signals in the spectral region of overtones, combination bands, and OH stretching vibrations were enhanced due to domination of volume reflection and represent additional information about chemical composition and changes that occur during the processes of thermal bone degradation. The created reference database contains crucial information about the chemical composition of heated bones and can represent an important tool for non-invasive characterisation of excavated bone materials. Vibrational characterization of heated bones by means of total reflection FTIR spectroscopy with the KK operation was verified for the first time on cremated human remains excavated from three Slovenian archaeological sites of different chronological age and cultural context.
ISSN:1296-2074
1778-3674
DOI:10.1016/j.culher.2019.07.006