Point-and-Shoot Obsidian Analysis

Digs & Discoveries January/February 2014

(Courtesy Ellery Frahm, University of Sheffield)
SHARE:

Archaeologists can decipher a culture’s trade network and the distances it might have covered by tracing obsidian, used by ancient people for making tools, back to its source volcano. Until now, researchers sent the volcanic glass artifacts uncovered at sites to laboratories for analysis, with results only available months later. The time-consuming process could take up to five minutes per fragment—and there are often a lot of fragments.

University of Sheffield research fellow Ellery Frahm has successfully tested a new method for performing on-site obsidian sorting on more than 600 artifacts at two sites in Armenia. Frahm used a tool from the lab, a handheld instrument resembling a supermarket price gun, that performs X-ray fluorescence (XRF), scanning an artifact in only 10 seconds. The device discerns the concentration of certain elements in the material—such as iron and zirconium—creating a chemical signature that can be compared with nearby obsidian sources. 

 

Moving XRF into the field, Frahm explains, could offer archaeologists real-time, on-site guidance for their excavation strategies. Critics, however, say the method sacrifices analytic precision, which would render it useless in regions that have a glut of obsidian sources, such as western Mexico.

Frahm likens the method to the preset modes on a digital camera—though the process lacks the control and precision of traditional lab methods, it provides a useful, expedient shortcut. “The preset modes allow one to take many more photos, often very good ones, much faster,” he says. “That’s not a bad thing.”

MORE TO DISCOVER

Letter from Nigeria

July/August 2024

A West African Kingdom's Roots

Excavations in Benin City reveal a renowned realm’s deep history

Artifacts July/August 2024

Etruscan Oil Lamp

Read Article
Etruscan Hanging Oil Lamp
(Courtesy Museo dell’Accademia Etrusca e della Città di Cortona; © DeA Picture Library/Art Resource, NY)

Around the World July/August 2024

TONGA

Read Article
(Phillip Parton/ANU)

Digs & Discoveries July/August 2024

Bronze Age Beads Go Abroad

Read Article
(Courtesy Cambridge Archaeological Unit)

Features July/August 2024

Java's Megalithic Mountain

Across the Indonesian archipelago, people raised immense stones to honor their ancestors

Read Article
Indonesia Java Gunung Padang Megalithic Site
(Courtesy Lutfi Yondri)