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Mummies --- Paleopathology --- Radiography. --- Radiography --- Medical archaeology --- Pathology --- Radiography in archaeology
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Fossil hominids --- Radiography in archaeology --- Teeth --- Atlases. --- Atlases. --- Radiography --- Atlases.
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Iberians --- Pottery --- Radiography in archaeology --- Analysis --- Valencia (Spain : Region) --- Antiquities --- Pottery, Iberian --- Radiography in archaeology. --- Analysis. --- Antiquities. --- Iberians - Spain - Valencia (Region) --- Pottery - Analysis --- Valencia (Spain : Region) - Antiquities
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Mummies --- Paleopathology --- Radiography. --- Radiography --- Egypt --- Antiquities. --- Medical archaeology --- Pathology --- Radiography in archaeology
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Mummies --- Paleopathology --- Radiography --- Manchester Museum (University of Manchester) --- University of Manchester. --- Manchester University Museum --- Radiography in archaeology --- Medical archaeology --- Pathology
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About the authors -- Index. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometry is a nondestructive elemental analysis technique utilized in many industrial and research settings. Developments in instrument components and design have allowed applications of XRF spectrometry to expand beyond the laboratory and into field settings such as museums and archaeological excavation sites. This book serves as a practical guide for the application of XRF spectrometry to the study and understanding of archaeology. Early chapters serve as both an introduction to XRF theory and instrumentation as well as an introduction to field applications and practical aspects of archaeology and conservation. These early chapters thus provide those new to XRF and/or new to field archaeology a solid foundation on which to base further study. Based on recent trends within field archaeology, information specific to portable instrumentation also is included in early chapters in addition to a later separate chapter devoted to data collection in the field including both field labs and archaeological sites. The chapter devoted to data discusses qualitative and quantitative approaches, applications of various statistical methods to XRF data, and then relates these data types and statistical methods back to the types of archaeological questions that are possible to answer through XRF analysis. With statistics playing an ever-increasing role in data evaluation, new and experienced users of XRF spectrometry will find the statistics overview particularly helpful in expanding how data can be interpreted and presented. The book concludes with individual chapters devoted to specific archaeological sample types including pigments, ceramics, glass, construction materials, and metallurgical materials. Each of these material-specific chapters includes a section relating that material type back to the archaeology itself. Numerous examples, figures, and spectra are provided within these chapters.
X-ray spectroscopy in archaeology. --- X-Ray spectroscopy --- Radiography in archaeology --- Archaeology --- Data processing --- X-ray spectroscopy. --- Methodology
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/inca/publications/misc/creaghcov.htmAbout the cover This book contains twenty chapters covering a wide range of research in the fields of scientific conservation of art and archaeometry. The common thread is the use of radiation in these analyses. The term ""radiation"" is used in the widest possible sense. The book encompasses the use of electromagnetic radiation in its microwave, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, x ray and &ggr; ray forms and the use of particulate forms such as electrons, neutrons and charged particles for which the Planck's Law rel
Art --- Radiography in archaeology. --- Archaeometry. --- Radiography. --- Expertising. --- Archaeology --- Archaeological radiography --- Archaeological dating --- Expertising of art objects --- Radiography --- Methodology --- History --- Provenance --- Expertising of art
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Prolongeant une réflexion méthodologique amorcée en 2010, trois archéologues spécialistes du mobilier archéologique proposent ici une réflexion d'ensemble sur la représentation des objets archéologiques non céramiques. Le mobilier lithique des périodes préhistoriques et protohistoriques, la vaisselle céramique et en verre ou encore les monnaies disposent de codifications graphiques relativement claires qui sont utilisées par le plus grand nombre. En revanche, le reste du mobilier archéologique, parfois qualifié - à défaut d'autre terme - d'instrumentum ou de petit mobilier, concerne des matériaux, des formes et des dimensions particulièrement variés. Cette diversité d'objets pose des problèmes complexes qui n'ont pas favorisé la création de véritable normalisation dans leur documentation graphique. Aucun ouvrage francophone n'a fait le point sur ces questions depuis les actes de la table ronde de Valbonne publiés il y a presque 40 ans (1982). Le développement des outils numériques et l'exhumation de corpus mobilier de plus en plus conséquents, particulièrement dans le secteur des fouilles préventives, ont profondément modifié nos pratiques d'archéologues en matière de documentation graphique. Après une enquête épistémologique et historiographique sur les usages en matière de représentation du mobilier archéologique des cabinets de curiosités du XVIe s. à l'archéologie contemporaine, cet ouvrage essaye d'exposer le spectre le plus complet possible des techniques existantes tout en précisant les quelques règles, normes et conventions auxquelles l'archéologie ne peut se soustraire. En passant en revue ces différents questionnements, ainsi que les réponses apportées par les archéologues et les illustrateurs, l'ouvrage parcourt la complexité des problèmes posés par la représentation de ce type de mobilier. Il propose des solutions pour guider archéologues et étudiants dans l'élaboration d'une documentation graphique sur les objets archéologiques non céramiques, qui saura répondre aux exigences des publications actuelles
Illustration archéologique. --- Archéologie --- Méthodologie. --- Archaeology --- Archaeological illustration --- Photography in archaeology --- Radiography in archaeology --- Methodology --- Illustration archéologique --- Antiquités. --- Archéologie --- Archéologie et art --- Méthodologie
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physicochemical processes --- restauratie (kunst) --- restoration [process] --- Conservation. Restoration --- fysicochemie --- Electrochemical analysis --- elektrochemische analyse --- materialen (kunst) --- materials [matter] --- Archeology --- Antiquities --- Archaeology --- Art --- Nondestructive testing. --- Radiography in archaeology. --- Scanning electron microscopy in archaeology. --- Collection and preservation. --- Methodology. --- Expertising. --- materials [substances]
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