Subject: Buried metal
Jack Ogden <jack [at] striptwist__com> writes >There are sometimes minute, very fragile meandering tubes on ancient >buried metal objects that I have always thought of as 'worm casts' >(though that might not be the right term). ... I have seen similar tube-like forms on both iron artifacts from historical sites in the USA and also on bog ores (limonites). My impression was that these small tubular forms derived their morphology from organic materials, such as twigs and roots and other faunal materials, deposited with the artifacts in a mud/wet/boggy/swamp matrix. This sort of burial environment was conducive for the formation of a corrosion/soil matrix cast of such materials, that deteriorate and leave their tubes behind. I have also seen the impression of small sea shells in such matrices as well. I also remember that some of the iron-fixing bacteria in anaerobic environments leave microscopic tubercle in an iron oxide crust--remember those famous martian meteoric samples that kicked up a stir back in the mid-1990's, because there were tubercular forms of magnetite found in the samples from Antartica? I hope these possibilities offer some avenues for further investigation. David Harvey Conservator Griswold Conservation Associates Beverly Hills, California USA *** Conservation DistList Instance 18:8 Distributed: Wednesday, July 21, 2004 Message Id: cdl-18-8-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 13 July, 2004