Abstract
Mineral pigment provenance is a promising direction in cultural heritage particularly in ancient polychromy research. The analysis of trace elements and Pb-isotopes can provide clues about the origin of pigment raw materials. While previous investigations already showed great potential for provenancing archeological-historical mineral pigments, sampling methods and reference data collections need to be developed further to evaluate the potential and limitations of this type of research. This work tests a new sampling method for pigment provenance research that collects sample material with easily available (suffused) cotton swabs for analysis by mass spectrometry. Three artifacts decorated with Egyptian blue and red pigments were selected for comparing sampling with cotton swabs to sampling with a scalpel. All three artifacts date to the 1st century BCE: The first is a colossal marble head from Lazio, Italy, which probably belonged to a seated cult statue of Zeus, and with extensive remains of ancient red paint. The two artifacts (a slag and a fragment of a terracotta vessel) were recovered during Petrie's excavations of an Egyptian blue production facility in Memphis, Egypt. The new results are consistent with previous studies, which provides the necessary quality control for the cotton swab sampling method. This work contributes to improving sampling methods for pigment provenance analysis as well as to a better understanding of past pigment production and trade networks.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 126-134 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Journal of Cultural Heritage |
| Volume | 69 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Sept 2024 |
Funding
ARR thank the Dr. Anton Oelzelt-Newin'schen Stiftung (Project OSTE000176 ) for the generous funding that made this project possible, and for the support by Tine Bagh and Rune Frederiksen (Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek) for access to the artifacts. Moreover, ARR thanks her colleagues at the Austrian Archaeological Institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Toni Larsen, Cristina Nora Jensen de Olsen and Toby Frederick Leeper (University of Copenhagen), and Monika Horschinegg (University of Vienna), for their support. We are thankful for the comments of two anonymous reviewers that improved the initial text.
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 106026 Ecosystem research
- 105906 Environmental geosciences
Keywords
- Egyptian blue pigments
- Pb-isotope analysis
- Red pigments
- Trace and rare earth element analysis
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