학술논문

REMARKS AND CAUTION ON FINDS OF KASTROULI MYCENAEAN SETTLEMENT (LOOFAH, CHARCOAL, BONE, WALL BURNT CLAY COATING, CERAMIC)
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Scientific Culture. May, 2023, Vol. 9 Issue 2, p1, 28 p.
Subject
California
Greece
United Kingdom
Language
English
ISSN
2408-0071
Abstract
The excavated materials of the Late Helladic III settlement Kastrouli in Phokis, Greece has produced significant diverse information regarding chronology, human mobility, diet, characterization and provenance. The comingled burial of Tomb A and the finds from at least two buildings also contained some strange materials which properly analyzed offer a plea for caution. Moreover, they offer an opportunity to examine technological aspects, identification of species, dating and firing conditions. The few materials investigated here by Optical microscopy (OM), SEM-EDS, FTIR and (14)C include some spongy-like fibers, an incised ceramic sherd, a burnt bone, burnt clay and four radiocarbon dates of charcoal and bone. It was found that the spongy material was (14)C dated to a modern loofah intruded in the tomb A; and the 'decoration' in the grooves in the incised ceramic was remnants of the soil in which it was buried and not any possible incrustation or filling with unfired clay. The burnt animal bone analysis by FTIR provided a possible firing at ca 400-550 [degrees]C. The OM of the burnt clay has not produced any possible print textile. The radiocarbon dating of charcoal and one bone produced dates ca.13th c BCE, and the spans from 14thc BCE to late 12 th C BCE is discussed in the light of wiggles during this period in the calibration curve. KEYWORDS: Radiocarbon dating, Spectroscopy, Microscopy, excavation, Late Helladic, pottery, tomb, calibration, luminescence.
1. INTRODUCTION Kastrouli is located in the Phokis area of central Greece, on the plateau of the peninsula of Desfina, southeast of Delphi, about 550 meters above sea level, and [...]