The provenance and technology of Near Eastern glass: Oxygen isotopes by laser fluorination as a complement to strontium


Autoria(s): Leslie, K. A.; Freestone, I. C.; Lowry, R.; Thirlwall, M.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

The ability to make rapid measurements on small samples using laser fluorination enhances the potential of oxygen isotopes in the investigation of early inorganic materials and technologies. delta O-18 and Sr-87/Sr-86 values are presented for glass from two primary production sites, four secondary production sites and a consumer site in the Near East, dating from Late Antiquity to the medieval period. delta O-18 is in general slightly less effective than Sr-87/Sr-86 in discriminating between sources, as the spread of measured values from a single source is somewhat broader relative to the available range. However, while Sr-87/Sr-86 is derived predominantly from either the lime-bearing fraction of the glass-making sand or the plant ash used as a source of alkali, delta O-18 derives mainly from the silica. Thus the two measurements can provide complementary information. A comparison of delta O-18 for late Roman - Islamic glasses made on the coast of Syria-Palestine with those of previously analysed glasses from Roman Europe suggests that the European glasses are relatively enriched in O-18. This appears to contradict the view that most Roman glass was made using Levantine sand and possible interpretations are discussed.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:81109

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Chemistry, Analytical #strontium #isotope #laser fluorination #tims #glass #Provenance #Roman #Byzantine #Early Islamic Period #Syria-palestine #Egypt #Islamic Glass #Raw Glass #Byzantine #Israel #Glassmaking #Phosphate #Minerals #Tyre #Lead #C1 #04 Earth Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article