Chemistry of archaeological animal fats

RP Evershed, SN Dudd, MS Copley… - Accounts of chemical …, 2002 - ACS Publications
RP Evershed, SN Dudd, MS Copley, R Berstan, AW Stott, H Mottram, SA Buckley…
Accounts of chemical research, 2002ACS Publications
Animal fats are preserved at archaeological sites in association with unglazed pottery,
human and animal remains, and other deposits or hoards. High-temperature gas
chromatography (HT-GC) and combined HT-GC/mass spectrometry (HT-GC/MS) has
confirmed the presence of animal fats in lipid extracts of artifacts. Degradation products and
pathways have been discerned through the analyses of archaeological finds and the
products of laboratory and field-based decay experiments. The origins of preserved fats …
Animal fats are preserved at archaeological sites in association with unglazed pottery, human and animal remains, and other deposits or hoards. High-temperature gas chromatography (HT-GC) and combined HT-GC/mass spectrometry (HT-GC/MS) has confirmed the presence of animal fats in lipid extracts of artifacts. Degradation products and pathways have been discerned through the analyses of archaeological finds and the products of laboratory and field-based decay experiments. The origins of preserved fats have been determined through detailed compositional analysis of their component fatty acids by GC, by GC/MS of dimethyl disulfide derivatives of monoenoic components, and by GC−combustion−isotope ratio-MS (GC−C−IRMS), to derive diagenetically robust δ13C values. Regiospecific analysis of intact triacylglycerols by high-performance liquid chromatography/MS (HPLC/MS), with atmospheric pressure chemical ionization, provides a further criterion for establishing the origin of fats. Preparative GC has been employed to isolate individual fatty acids from archaeological pottery in sufficient amounts for 14C dating.
ACS Publications
Showing the best result for this search. See all results