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Environmental dust: A tool to study the patina of ancient artifacts
Authors:E. Ganor   J. Kronfeld   H.R. Feldman   A. Rosenfeld  S. Ilani  
Affiliation:aDepartment of Geophysics and Planetary sciences, Tel Aviv University, 69978 Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel;bAmerican Museum of Natural History, 79th Street at Central Park West, New York, NY 10024, USA;cGeological Survey of Israel, 30 Malkhei Israel St., Jerusalem 95501, Israel
Abstract:Dust is a significant, albeit under-recognized, component of ancient patinas that accumulates on exposed surfaces of artifacts. Dust storms are ubiquitous in the Levant; however, often unnoticed substances such as minerals, microfossils and pollen can be found within the patina of an artifact, preserving its geological signature. Modern anthropogenic aerosol sources are often characterized by the presence of heavy metals. Pollen from fruits and shrubs that are not indigenous, if found in the patina, can be used to differentiate recent artifacts from those of antiquity. Archaeological materials that are exposed to local environmental and depositional processes in a tel, a cave or soil, may accrete in a patina over time and may have some dust components reflective of the environmental record. The scores of unprovenanced looted antiquities have necessitated the need to differentiate a genuine artifact from a modern fraud. Since the geological component of the dust in the Levant is known, and the climate and its attendant wind patterns apparently were quite constant during recent millennia times, the dust in the patinas of a true artifact is easy to differentiate from patinas containing modern dust. Both contemporary and historical dust can serve as tools to authenticate an artifact.
Keywords:Aerosols   Anthropogenic   Artifact   Dust   Microfossils   Patina   Pollen
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