2016
DOI: 10.1017/rdc.2016.69
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Successfully Dating Rock Art in Southern Africa Using Improved Sampling Methods and New Characterization and Pretreatment Protocols

Abstract: Worldwide, dating rock art is difficult to achieve because of the frequent lack of datable material and the difficulty of removing contamination from samples. Our research aimed to select the paints that would be the most likely to be successfully radiocarbon dated and to estimate the quantity of paint needed depending on the nature of the paint and the weathering and alteration products associated with it. To achieve this aim, a two-step sampling strategy, coupled with a multi-instrument characterization (inc… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…In the case where inorganic pigmented paints is found, the vehicle used to bind the pigments is dated (Li et al 2012; Baker and Armitage 2013). However, due to relatively large amounts of sample material required (>20 mg material; Bonneau et al 2016), such methods have not been applied routinely for the analysis of modern and contemporary art.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case where inorganic pigmented paints is found, the vehicle used to bind the pigments is dated (Li et al 2012; Baker and Armitage 2013). However, due to relatively large amounts of sample material required (>20 mg material; Bonneau et al 2016), such methods have not been applied routinely for the analysis of modern and contemporary art.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is an abundance of literature that highlights the cultural significance of rock art as well as the attempts to date paintings and petroglyphs in many parts of the world [31,32]. However, rock art is one of the most fragile forms of ancient heritage and its preservation is understudied.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies omit in general the description and morphological characterization of the layer contents, as well as the quantification, measurement, and distribution of its components or grains present in each one (Marte et al 2011 and; to illustrate our purpose see Chalmin et al, 2003;Vignaud et al, 2006;Gheco et al 2020, as they describe precisely what we want to sustain here). As a consequence, chemical characterization of the different layers, the eventual quantification of their composition, and the mixtures identified are interpreted as the result of different mixtures, or different paint pots, in other words, the elemental and molecular differences correspond to different recipes (Chalmin et al, 2003;Vignaud et al, 2006;Bonneau et al, 2016).…”
Section: -Microarchaeology For Rock Art Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%