2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10717-017-9957-5
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Dynamics of Chemical Composition Variation of 18th – 19th Century Russian Glass

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“…Beyond the Tal'sy glass factory, we looked at other glass compositions in Russia and Siberia around the 18th to 19th centuries CE. Khramchenkova et al (2017) and Khramchenkova and Sitdikov (2014) published a composition of glass beads and glass containers found in Kazan, Russia, a city located 800 km east of Moscow, showing the switch from potash-based recipes at the end of the 18th century CE to a soda-based one in the 19th century CE. The Kazan glass containers have generally very similar potash and lime concentrations compared to the SWP beads, but alumina is generally low (<1.42%) constituting a good match only for those SWP beads with the lower alumina concentrations.…”
Section: Russia and Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Beyond the Tal'sy glass factory, we looked at other glass compositions in Russia and Siberia around the 18th to 19th centuries CE. Khramchenkova et al (2017) and Khramchenkova and Sitdikov (2014) published a composition of glass beads and glass containers found in Kazan, Russia, a city located 800 km east of Moscow, showing the switch from potash-based recipes at the end of the 18th century CE to a soda-based one in the 19th century CE. The Kazan glass containers have generally very similar potash and lime concentrations compared to the SWP beads, but alumina is generally low (<1.42%) constituting a good match only for those SWP beads with the lower alumina concentrations.…”
Section: Russia and Chinamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fig. 7.5:Bivariate comparison plots of soda vs. alumina (a), and potash vs. lime (b) for the SWP potash glass beads and glass samples from contemporaneous sites in Russia/Siberia(Dovgalyuk and Tataurova 2010;Khramchenkova and Sitdikov 2014;Khramchenkova et al 2017; Dussubieux, unpubl.) and China(Gan 2009: 35).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%