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ALUMINA AND CALCIUM OXIDE CONTENT OF GLASS FOUND IN WESTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE, FIRST TO NINTH CENTURIES
Authors:B VELDE
Institution:Dept. de Geologie Ecole Normale Superieure 24 rue Lhomond 75231 Paris
Abstract:Summary. The glass of Gallo-roman origin and that considered as coming from the several centuries after the disintegration of the Roman empire has much the same composition in examples found in northern and western Europe. The components calcium oxide and alumina (CaO and Al2O3) increase or decrease together. Compositional variation between different samples from this geographic area are not much greater than those at a single site of manufacture. Contamination during the manufacture process is unlikely to account for the CaO and Al2O3 contents in glass from this period according to analyses of glass adhering to crucibles or fusion pots. CaO and Al2O3 were apparently added intentionally to the glass composition. A slight tendency to an increase in these oxides is accompanied by a decrease in Na2O content which might be due to a loss through volatilization during re-workings. Such a trend is apparent in the eighth to ninth century samples. The remarkably constant composition of glass found in a wide area for objects produced over a long period of time suggests that a limited number of production sites existed for either the raw materials or the confection of raw glass which was fashioned at various other sites.
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