C. Doumas’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis of a Gold Ibex and other Artifacts from Akrotiri
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2019

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296 Reads

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3 Citations

HNPS Advances in Nuclear Physics

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C. Doumas

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In-situ X-ray fluorescence analysis (XRF) of ancient artifacts from the excavation area was performed using a novel X-ray instrumentation, composed of a portable silicon PIN thermoelectrically cooled X-ray detector, a miniature X-ray source, and portable data acquisition devices. The main objective of the analyses in Akrotiri was to explore the potential of the technique to provide answers to a wide range of archaeometric questions regarding the bulk composition of metal alloys, especially of gold, the characterization of corrosion products in bronze artifacts, identification of inorganic elements which are fingerprints of the minerals used in wall-painting pigments, and of the painting materials and techniques used for the decoration of clay vase surfaces. Among the analysed artifacts are a unique gold ibex, a bronze dagger and blade, various pigments from the wall paintings of room 3 in Xeste 3, decoration pigments from rosettes of faience, a bichrome jug, and other clay vases. The results of the in-situ XRF survey, primarily those of the bulk composition and soldering technology of the gold ibex, are discussed and compared with literature.

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Near Surface Geophysical Archaeological Prospection at the Prehistoric Site of Akrotiri on Santorini/Thera

September 2014

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277 Reads

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3 Citations

In February 2014 high-resolution ground penetrating radar and earth resistance tomography measurements have for the first time been used successfully for the distinct mapping of buried archaeological structures in the vicinity of the Bronze Age archaeological site of Akrotiri on Santorini/Thera in Greece.

Citations (2)


... Dubbed portable XRF (PXRF, pXRF), field-portable XRF (FPXRF), or handheld XRF, such instrumentation has been commercially available since the early-to-mid 1960s (Piorek, 1997), and was being used to analyze archaeological materials as early as the 1970s (e.g., Cesareo et al., 1973). By the mid-1990s, following technological developments in computing and instrumentation (e.g., tubes, detectors, and associated electronics), portable XRF instruments were beginning to see increased use in geology (e.g., Potts et al., 1995Potts et al., , 1997a and archaeology (e.g., Emery and Morgenstein, 2007;Morgenstein and Redmount, 2005;Pantazis et al., 2002;Potts et al., 1997b;Williams-Thorpe et al., 1999. And, since about 2005, there has been a tremendous increase in the number of portable instruments sold to the art and archaeological communities. ...

Reference:

Sourcing Ceramics With Portable XRF Spectrometers? A Comparison With INAA Using Mimbres Pottery From the American Southwest
X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis of a Gold Ibex and other Artifacts from Akrotiri

HNPS Advances in Nuclear Physics