The application of forensic fire investigation techniques in the archaeological record |
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Authors: | Karl Harrison |
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Institution: | Department of Engineering and Applied Science, Cranfield University, Defence College of Management and Technology, Shrivenham, Swindon SN6 8LA, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | This paper seeks to assist in defining a role for a suite of adapted techniques of analysis and interpretation that are drawn primarily from the methods of contemporary forensic fire investigation. In so doing, the paper identifies a general paucity of literature providing detailed discussions of structural fires preserved in the archaeological record. In addition the paper provides a generalised account of the manner in which structural fires (most especially compartment fires, defined later) will tend to burn and which tools can assist in the interpretation of fire dynamics, the identification of points of origin of fire within buildings, and the response of building materials to burning. Ultimately, such an approach can improve understanding of past structures, and also provide an interpretative avenue for understanding human response to fire and the risk of structural fire in the past. |
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