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Differentiating between anthropogenic calcite in plaster,ash and natural calcite using infrared spectroscopy: implications in archaeology
Authors:Vikki Chu  Lior Regev  Steve Weiner  Elisabetta Boaretto
Institution:1. Radiocarbon and Cosmogenic Isotopes Laboratory, Kimmel Center for Archaeological Science, Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel;2. Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel;3. Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology, Bar Ilan University, 52900 Ramat Gan, Israel
Abstract:Infrared spectroscopy provides information not only on the type of calcium carbonate polymorph, but also on the extent of atomic order. In calcite, three major infrared absorption peaks are identified: ν3, ν2, and ν4. It was shown that the ratio between ν2 and ν4 bands reflects the order of the calcite crystal structure. In this paper we analyse this ratio in geologically formed calcites, archaeological plasters, modern plasters and experimentally prepared plasters. For the geological calcite, the values of the ν2/ν4 ratio are around 3, whereas for the experimentally prepared plasters, the values are around 6.5. The ν2/ν4 ratio for archaeological plasters varies from 3 to 6. This shows that a high ratio is indicative of disorder in the crystal, and implies that the calcite was formed from calcium oxide at high temperatures. It also implies that this disorder can be preserved for at least 14,000 years. The ν2/ν4 ratio of calcite from archaeological sites can thus be used to differentiate between anthropogenic calcite, such as in plaster, mortar and wood ash, from geogenic calcite, such as in limestone. The ratio may also be used to identify plaster or ash that still retains its original crystals and therefore carbon-14 content.
Keywords:Pyrotechnology  Crystal disorder  Calcium carbonate  Radiocarbon dating
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