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Reflectance - Current state of research and future directions for archaeological charcoal; Results from a pilot study on Irish Bronze Age cremation charcoals

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Veal, R 
O'Donnell, L 
McParland, L 

Abstract

‘Reflectance’ is a method that estimates the absolute burn temperature of charcoal from the ‘shininess’ of resin mounted samples. The method's usefulness for archaeological charcoal is yet to be comprehensively studied. This article details first results from reflectance testing of archaeological charcoals excavated from Irish Bronze Age cremations, which included calcined bone. As calcination of bone commences at 650 °C, it was expected that the charcoals would reflect at least this temperature. This was not the case for taxonomically identified charcoals >2 mm, nor for micro-charcoals of c. 250 μm, although measured temperatures rose slightly with decreasing fraction size of charcoal remains. Depositional practice, combustion completeness and taphonomic influences may have all played a part in this result, and these will need careful consideration in different archaeological circumstances. However, the greatest challenge for reflectance of archaeological materials lies in obtaining full agreement on the production and use of reflectance calibration curves. Current calibration curves differ substantially, by 100–150 °C (±50–75 °C) and in one instance up to as much as 180 °C (±90 °C). Without better agreement on calibration, the method's ultimate usefulness in archaeological research will be limited. At the level of refinement currently possible, it will still be useful for determining very high or very low temperature processes, and possibly the difference between charcoal fuel and raw wood fuel fires. The latter has distinct implications for estimating ancient forest wood consumption, since more wood is consumed in processes employing charcoal fuel. Proving the utility of reflectance for archaeological purposes may also require modification of normal practice for archaeological field collection of charcoal, to include collection and laboratory processing of un-sieved soil samples.

Description

Keywords

reflectance, charcoal absolute burn temperature, reflectance calibration curve, cremation

Journal Title

Journal of Archaeological Science

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-4403

Volume Title

75

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
The authors acknowledge the support of the CSIRO, Sydney; the Department of Archaeology, and the Australian Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis, University of Sydney (especially materials preparation specialist, Mr Adam Sikorski); and the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge. Excavations were carried out by Margaret Gowen & Co. Ltd, funded by the National Roads Authority, Ireland. This research was partly funded by the Government of Ireland, Irish Research Council (Project id GOIPD/2013/387) supported by the School of Archaeology, University College Dublin.