2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2014.03.011
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The taphonomy and preservation of wood and dung ashes found in archaeological cooking installations: case studies from Iron Age Israel

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Cited by 107 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…3000 years old fired pottery is only partial (apparent by the presence of an OH band at 3620 cm −1 , while the OH band at 3690 cm −1 is absent). Similar observations were made by Berna et al (2007), Eliyahu-Behar et al (2012, Gur-Arieh et al (2013, 2014 and Friesem et al (2014a) who worked in various locations in Israel, Uzbekistan and Greece, where different types of soils and sediments occur. They all point to the same spectral changes in heated clay minerals, and show that these spectral changes are preserved for thousands of years.…”
Section: Background To the Study Of Mud Bricks In Conflagration Eventsupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…3000 years old fired pottery is only partial (apparent by the presence of an OH band at 3620 cm −1 , while the OH band at 3690 cm −1 is absent). Similar observations were made by Berna et al (2007), Eliyahu-Behar et al (2012, Gur-Arieh et al (2013, 2014 and Friesem et al (2014a) who worked in various locations in Israel, Uzbekistan and Greece, where different types of soils and sediments occur. They all point to the same spectral changes in heated clay minerals, and show that these spectral changes are preserved for thousands of years.…”
Section: Background To the Study Of Mud Bricks In Conflagration Eventsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…It is however unclear whether this heat-affected calcite originates from heated sediment carbonates and/or from mixing vegetal ash products with sediment during brick manufacture. Two observations support the second option, (a) the mud bricks contain phosphate minerals and (b) the high concentrations of phytoliths, both materials are well documented in hearth and oven ashes from both ethnoarchaeological and archaeological contexts, including at Tel Megiddo (Gur-Arieh et al, 2013;2014). We therefore suggest that the recipe of preparation of the Level Q-7 mud bricks included a mixture of ash rake-out from ovens and hearths with natural sediment.…”
Section: Brick Composition and Manufacturementioning
confidence: 63%
“…Livestock dung fuels have been investigated in terms of their archaeological evidence and experimentally described (e.g., Braadbaart et al 2012;Canti 2003;Gur-Arieh et al 2014; Matthews 2010; Shahack-Gross 2011; Shahack-Gross and Finkelstein 2008). The burning of dung produces microscopic sedimentary components that can be readily identified by the presence of calcitic dung spherulites, burned organic plant tis-sues (which can include ash pseudomorphs), and residual inorganic components (Brochier 1983;Matthews 2010; Shahack-Gross 2011).…”
Section: Animal Dung Peat and Turf As Fuel Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2) Given the solubility of calcitic dung spherulites and ash pseudomorphs, the presence of both microremains within the sealed archaeological contexts of Structure 1 argues for relatively good preservation of this sediment (see Gur-Arieh et al 2014, for a solubility test of spherulites vs. pseudomorphs). (3) Given the good preservation of the calcitic microremains, dung spherulites and ash pseudomorphs, there is no reason to assume that phytoliths are not well preserved.…”
Section: The Nearby Sitementioning
confidence: 99%