Subject: Copper beads
Carrie Duran <carried [at] cityofgastonia__com> writes >We have some copper beads from an archaeological site in Gaston >County, NC. We would like to do some specialized analysis on them, >but they are too oxidized to get accurate readings. They appear to >be almost pure copper because there are no alloys to suggest >European copper. ... The answer to your question depends on a number of factors. Firstly, the bead even if heavily oxidized, can simply be analysed by XRF which will tell you if it is essentially just copper or whether it is a copper alloy of some sort. If that is not the kind of analysis that you need and you really want to determine the composition of the copper, then taking a drilling with a 1mm twist drill into the metal (if any) is the best way to go, the drillings are then used for ICP-MS or similar analysis for 40 elements down to the ppm level and then you are talking about a real analysis of your copper which XRF or SEM cannot provide...but what happens if the copper is really totally corroded? What exactly do you want to know from your analysis? In general, I prefer not to polish whole objects with diamond paste as you suggest, as losing the patina or corrosion interface is a loss of information on the entire bead--the copper sheet that you suggest washing in distilled water--generally this will not improve an XRF analysis so it is unnecessary....if you want to determine trace element composition from the copper sheet then a sample or drilling is necessary and patina should be preserved if possible. Professor David A. Scott Chair, UCLA/Getty Conservation Program The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Room A410 University of California, Los Angeles 405 Hilgard Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90095 *** Conservation DistList Instance 19:3 Distributed: Thursday, June 23, 2005 Message Id: cdl-19-3-008 ***Received on Thursday, 16 June, 2005