Abstract. The authors examine the isotopic composition of leaf water, at natural abundance levels, as influenced by transpiration rate. The isotopic composition of water of wheat leaves (Triticum aestivum L. var. Aroona) was followed while their transpiration rate adjusted to ‘steady‐state’ environmental conditions. Leaf diffusive resistance was modified by short‐term salt treatment and by plant culture in either nutrient solution, free‐draining sand, or vermiculite. Resultant changes in 18O and 2H in leaf water are described and fitted to the model of Leaney et al. (1985). The treatments with lower transpiration rates were found to have a greater fraction of their leaf water equilibrated with water vapour in the atmosphere. Comparable results were obtained with both 18O and 2H, with some differences being interpreted in terms of turbulence in the vapour diffusion path. The fraction of the leaf water equilibrated with the atmosphere varied between leaves of different ages. However, this may have been due to their different positions in the canopy.
This paper considers pollution/toxicological science in an archaeological context. Copper mining was an important activity in southern Jordan, especially during the Bronze Age, Nabatean, Roman, and Byzantine periods, and the environmental legacy of such intensive mining and smelting activities exists today in the form of massive, ancient spoil and smelting tips. The environment was heavily polluted by copper, lead, and other cations during these early periods and the effects of such pollutants continue into modern times. Samples of goat, sheep, and Bronze Age and Byzantine skeletons have been analyzed and high metal loads, from uptake by diverse processes, are reported. Emphasis is placed on the importance of sampling procedure and sample location, bioaccumulation, and the partitioning of such elements. Implications of such pollutants in terms of environmental and human health in ancient and modern times are discussed. Teeth are found to provide excellent vehicles for the monitoring of pollution in both ancient and recent times. Bronze Age skeletons exhibited chemical fingerprints different from those of the Byzantine period.
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