Coupling the beams: How controlled extraction methods and FTIR-spectroscopy, OM and SEM reveal the grinding of starchy plants in the Pontic steppe 36,000 years ago
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LONGO, Laura, BIRARDA, Giovanni, CAGNATO, Clarissa, BADETTI, Elena, KOLAVENKO, Sergey, PANTYUKHINA, Irina, SKAKUN, Natalia, VACCARI, Lisa, TEREKHINA, Vera, SORRENTINO, Giusi. Coupling the beams: How controlled extraction methods and FTIR-spectroscopy, OM and SEM reveal the grinding of starchy plants in the Pontic steppe 36,000 years ago. In: Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2022, nr. 41, p. 0. ISSN 2352-409X. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103333
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Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Numărul 41 / 2022 / ISSN 2352-409X

Coupling the beams: How controlled extraction methods and FTIR-spectroscopy, OM and SEM reveal the grinding of starchy plants in the Pontic steppe 36,000 years ago

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103333

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Longo Laura1, Birarda Giovanni2, Cagnato Clarissa3, Badetti Elena1, Kolavenko Sergey4, Pantyukhina Irina5, Skakun Natalia6, Vaccari Lisa2, Terekhina Vera7, Sorrentino Giusi89
 
1 Ca' Foscari University of Venice,
2 Elettra Synchrotron Trieste,
3 Archeology of the Americas. UMR 8096, Paris,
4 Institute of Cultural Heritage,
5 Far Eastern Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences,
6 Institute for the History of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences,
7 Peter the Great Museum of Anthropogy ang Ethnography, Saint Petersburg,
8 University of Turin,
9 STARC-The Cyprus Institute, Nicosia
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 5 februarie 2022


Rezumat

 A selection of five ground stones from Pontic Steppe sites dating back to the Early Upper Palaeolithic (EUP) was used as test-cases to be analysed by combining wear-traces and use-related biogenic residues (U-RBR). The artifacts studied can be termed “legacy” objects, excavated even many decades ago and kept in museum storage facilities. This type of storage might be considered putatively prone to contamination. The multidimensional contextual approach we designed integrates the structural analysis of biogenic residues by means of visual light optical and electronic beams microscopy (OM/VLM and SEM) coupled with FTIR microspectroscopy and imaging (using both conventional and synchrotron infrared sources). SEM and FTIR are meant to provide high resolution morphological and chemical profiles and their coupled analysis revealed the presence of starch grains from the used areas of the stone tools. The goal of this paper is to present a reasoned streamlined procedure to collect appropriate samples suitable to detect the presence of ancient starches from ground stones tools recovered in museum collections.

Cuvinte-cheie
Extraction procedures, Microscopy (OM and SEM), museum collection, Plants processing, SR-FTIR spectroscopy, Starch analysis