“…These technological advances were boosted by geological exploration and mining prospection (e.g., Fabre, 2020), environmental studies (e.g., Turner et al, 2018), and/or planetary rover missions (Edwards, 2018), along with many other applications. Specifically, in archaeometry, more and more non-destructive tools in spectroscopy and spectrometry are used to constrain the mineralogy, the chemical composition, and the physical properties of archeological material, by e.g., portable magnetic susceptibility (pMS; e.g., Williams-Thorpe and Potts, 2002;Szakmány et al, 2011), portable XRF (Oyedotun, 2018;Müskens et al, 2018;Sinnesael et al, 2018), portable Gamma-Ray spectrometry (pGRS; Puccini et al, 2014), handheld Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (HH-LIBS; Senesi et al, 2018), portable Raman spectroscopy (e.g., Bersani and Madariaga, 2012) or spectrophotometry (Rogerio-Candelera, 2016;Boulvain et al, 2020). Combining these tools and the interpretation opens the door to high accuracy determination, discrimination, and sourcing of archeological materials (e.g., Liritzis and Zacharias, 2011;Papakosta et al, 2020).…”