2010
DOI: 10.1007/s00339-010-6108-z
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On oxidative degradation of parchment and its non-destructive characterisation and dating

Abstract: Historic parchment is an extremely complex material, not only due to the various methods of production used and various past environmental histories of objects, but also due to its inhomogeneous structure. Many traditional methods of characterisation are empirical, but useful since they have gained recognition by the end-users. In this paper, we investigated the shrinkage temperature of collagen and the influence of lipids contained in parchment on the measurements. While the content of lipids does not seem to… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The loss of accuracy is most probably related to the sampling variance. The quality of the model is similar to the quality of other dating models for chromogenic color prints (RMSECV = 5.4 years / 1942-2008 period) [32], and paper produced post-1850 (RMSEP = 9 years / 1850-1990 period) [31], and better than obtained for parchment (RMSECV = 72 years / 1200-1800 period) [35]. While the error of prediction (RMSEP) is acceptable, it is worth examining the uncertainty in the reference dates for the film stills.…”
Section: Development Of the Calibration Methodssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…The loss of accuracy is most probably related to the sampling variance. The quality of the model is similar to the quality of other dating models for chromogenic color prints (RMSECV = 5.4 years / 1942-2008 period) [32], and paper produced post-1850 (RMSEP = 9 years / 1850-1990 period) [31], and better than obtained for parchment (RMSECV = 72 years / 1200-1800 period) [35]. While the error of prediction (RMSEP) is acceptable, it is worth examining the uncertainty in the reference dates for the film stills.…”
Section: Development Of the Calibration Methodssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…It is possible to hypothesise that dating of paper using NIR is enabled due to the accumulation of degradation products during ageing, as well as due to the frequent changes in the manufacturing processes of historic materials. Both are reflected in the NIR spectra and these in turn enable dating, as has been shown previously for paper as well as for photographs and parchment [47][48][49]. It is not possible, due to the highly overlapped NIR absorption peaks, to examine which compounds or bond types specifically contribute to the success of PLS regressions for dating.…”
Section: Near Infrared Spectroscopymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Near Infrared spectroscopy has developed as a powerful tool for the analysis of historical material in recent years, including studies on parchment [16]. Given a uniform material and large enough library of samples, statistical methods such as partial least squares (PLS) can be used to develop predictive models based on NIR spectra.…”
Section: Near-infrared Analysis (Nir)mentioning
confidence: 99%