Autor: | I. Kenyon, M. L. Sempowski, M. Kapches, K. Karklins, J. McKechnie, S. Aufreiter, J.-F. Moreau, Ronald G.V. Hancock |
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Rok vydání: | 2000 |
Předmět: |
Cobalt glass
Silica glass Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Mineralogy Bead Pollution Archaeology Cobalt blue Analytical Chemistry Nuclear Energy and Engineering Glass beadmaking Group (periodic table) Non destructive visual_art visual_art.visual_art_medium Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Spectroscopy Smaltite |
Zdroj: | Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry. 244:567-573 |
ISSN: | 0236-5731 |
Popis: | Chemical analyses were made of royal blue glass trade beads from two early 17th century, archaeological sites in southern Ontario, Canada and from a glass beadmaking house in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. The results confirm that these beads were all mixed alkali — lime — silica glasses, coloured with Co and with opaque varients opacified with Sn. The groupings by chemistry tend to segregate by bead shapes, so that oval beads group together and circular shaped beads group together. Although the 2 Canadian sites are about 190 km apart, they produced 2 different sets of oval beads of similar chemistry, possibly helping confirm the contemporaneity of the people at both sites. An As/Co atomic ratio of about two may fit with the possible source of Co as a cobalt-arsenide ore (of common name smaltite) from the Hartz Mountains of eastern Germany, a source not far from either Amsterdam or Venice, both well known glass beadmaking centres of the period. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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