If they share one common theme, these collected papers clearly
indicate the directions of current research in archaeological
chemistry--a term that, taken in a broad sense, includes techniques
and methodologies of many areas of science other than chemistry.
Dr. Brill, in fact, advocates use of the term "archaeometry"
(coined by Dr. E. T. Hall of Oxford University) to describe more
accurately the work of quite a few investigators in the
field.Twenty-one chapters by distinguished contributors are
organized in three main categories according to research
objectives. Part One contains investigations of individual objects
or small groups of objects, describing how they were made and their
places in the early history of technology or science. Studies in
Part Two consist of analyses of such diverse materials as metals,
pottery, ob- sidian, and amber to uncover patterns of chemical
composition for the classification of fragments according to
provenance or date. A number of chapters in this section deal with
neutron-activation analysis. The book's final part describes four
techniques used for dating archaeological objects.The volume is
generous in scope, ranging over a variety of approaches and
motivations, research tools, and archaeological materials. Some of
the more technically advanced studies cover up-to-date and complex
instrumentation for analyzing samples more accurately, more
rapidly, and with greater convenience than before, while others
emphasize the detailed handling or "autopsy" of the objects
themselves. The material in this book was originally prepared for
the Fourth Symposium on Archaeological Chemistry, sponsored by the
Division of the History of Chemistry of the American Chemical
Society in 1968.Dr. Brill cites several problems that should form
the basis for further research: the criteria for selecting what is
necessary and significant from increasingly unwieldy bodies of
data; the means by which findings in this field can be used in a
more than descriptive manner to reveal something new about early
man; and the continued necessity for close cooperation between the
archaeometrist and archaeologist. The former, Dr. Brill points out,
must take a major part in interpreting his findings and not merely
leave his tabulations and statistical correlations to the historian
and archaeologist.
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