Macroscopic charred remains are since long studied in archaeology, archaeobotany, and palaeoenvironmental research. Despite this long tradition, very little attention has so far been given to microscopic charred botanical remains, which, apart from microcharcoal, are usually neglected. The discovery of extraordinarily well-preserved fossil bee breads and fragments of charred honeycombs in an etruscan settlement in northern Italy prompted us to perform a combustion experiment on fresh bee-breads, aimed to study the main morphological, structural and chemical modifications induced by heat on pollen grains and whole bee breads. The experiment enabled the observation and quantification of changes in overall shape and size, brightness, tectum structure and sculptures of pollen grains and in the chemical composition of whole bee breads. Data obtained on fresh material were then applied to archaeological samples from the Etruscan Forcello settlement for inferences on the combustion temperatures reached during the fire that destroyed the site.

Effects of stepped-combustion on fresh pollen grains: morphoscopic, thermogravimetric, and chemical proxies for the interpretation of archaeological charred assemblages.

Roberta Pini;Agostino Rizzi;
2018

Abstract

Macroscopic charred remains are since long studied in archaeology, archaeobotany, and palaeoenvironmental research. Despite this long tradition, very little attention has so far been given to microscopic charred botanical remains, which, apart from microcharcoal, are usually neglected. The discovery of extraordinarily well-preserved fossil bee breads and fragments of charred honeycombs in an etruscan settlement in northern Italy prompted us to perform a combustion experiment on fresh bee-breads, aimed to study the main morphological, structural and chemical modifications induced by heat on pollen grains and whole bee breads. The experiment enabled the observation and quantification of changes in overall shape and size, brightness, tectum structure and sculptures of pollen grains and in the chemical composition of whole bee breads. Data obtained on fresh material were then applied to archaeological samples from the Etruscan Forcello settlement for inferences on the combustion temperatures reached during the fire that destroyed the site.
2018
Istituto per la Dinamica dei Processi Ambientali - IDPA - Sede Venezia
Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria - IGAG
Dipartimento di Scienze del Sistema Terra e Tecnologie per l'Ambiente - DSSTTA
pollen
bee-breads
polar - equatorial diameters
brightness
tectum
GC-MS and IR analysis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/353127
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