NEUTRON ACTIVATION ANALYSIS: A POWERFUL TOOL IN PROVENANCE INVESTIGATIONS.

Sandro Meloni, Massimo Oddone IENI-CNR, Sezione di e Dipartimento di Chimica Generale dell’Università di Pavia.

Abstract.

It is well known that neutron activation analysis (NAA), both instrumental and destructive, allows the simultaneous determination of a number of elements, mostly trace elements, with high levels of precision and accuracy. These peculiar properties of NAA are very useful when applied to provenance studies, i.e. to the identification of the origin of raw materials with which artifacts had been manufactured in ancient times. Data reduction by statistical procedures, especially multivariate analysis techniques, provides a statistical “fingerprint” of investigated materials, both raw materials and archaeological artifacts, that, upon comparison, allows the identification of the provenance of prime matters used for artifact manufacturing. Thus information on quarries and flows exploitation in the antiquity, on technological raw materials processing, on trade routes and about the circulation of fakes, can be obtained. In the present paper two case studies are reported. The first one deals with the identification of the provenance of clay used to make ceramic materials, mostly bricks and tiles, recovered from the excavation of a Roman “villa” in (Roman name Laumellum) and of Roman settlings in (Roman name Clastidium). Both sites are located in the in areas called and Oltrepò respectively. The second one investigates the origin of the white marble used to build medieval arks, Carolingian age, located in the church of San Felice, now property of the University of Pavia. Experimental set-up, analytical results and data reduction procedures are presented and discussed.