Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/130925
Title: Microanalytical Investigation of Prehistoric Colorants from Uralian Rock Art (Ignatievskaya Cave and Idrisovskaya II and Zmiev Kamen’ Pictographs)
Authors: Kiseleva, D.
Shagalov, E.
Pankrushina, E.
Shirokov, V.
Khorkova, A.
Danilov, D.
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Kiseleva, D, Shagalov, E, Pankrushina, E, Shirokov, V, Khorkova, A & Danilov, D 2023, 'Microanalytical Investigation of Prehistoric Colorants from Uralian Rock Art (Ignatievskaya Cave and Idrisovskaya II and Zmiev Kamen’ Pictographs)', Heritage, Том. 6, № 1, стр. 67-89. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6010004
Kiseleva, D., Shagalov, E., Pankrushina, E., Shirokov, V., Khorkova, A., & Danilov, D. (2023). Microanalytical Investigation of Prehistoric Colorants from Uralian Rock Art (Ignatievskaya Cave and Idrisovskaya II and Zmiev Kamen’ Pictographs). Heritage, 6(1), 67-89. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6010004
Abstract: Uralian parietal and rock art (cave paintings and pictographs, or “pisanitsy”) represents a unique archaeological and cultural phenomenon, comprising 90 sites stretching for more than 800 km from north to south, which date from the Paleolithic era extending into the present Holocene epoch. The identification of the nature of prehistoric colorants provides an insight into their provenance, manufacture and utilization, as well as contributing to the conservation and restoration of drawings. The studies of mineral, elemental and organic phase composition of the colorant micro-samples from the drawings of Ignatievskaya cave and Idrisovskaya II and Zmiev Kamen’ pictographs (Southern and Middle Urals, Russia) discussed in the present work were carried out using a special set of microspectroscopic methods (SEM-EDS and Raman spectroscopy) offering high spatial resolution. The fatty acid composition of the organic phase was analyzed by GC–MS. The technology of colorant manufacture could have included thorough grinding and mixing of unheated hematite with an organic binder made from animal fat and a clayey extender in order to achieve the desired hue and intensity of the color. It is possible that the colorant was applied in layers (Idrisovskaya II and Zmiev Kamen’ pictographs). The development of authigenic phosphate and sulfate (gypsum) mineralization, which is observed in all studied sites, as well as oxalate encrustation on the Idrisovskaya II pictograph, indicates the conditions and processes of secondary mineral formation. © 2022 by the authors.
Keywords: FATTY ACIDS
HEMATITE
IDRISOVSKAYA II AND ZMIEV KAMEN’ PICTOGRAPHS
IGNATIEVSKAYA CAVE
MINERAL PIGMENTS
ORGANIC BINDER
PARIETAL ART
PREHISTORIC URALIAN PICTOGRAPHS
RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY
ROCK ART
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/130925
Access: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
cc-by
License text: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
SCOPUS ID: 85146738372
WOS ID: 000915314500001
PURE ID: 33968655
ISSN: 2571-9408
DOI: 10.3390/heritage6010004
metadata.dc.description.sponsorship: Russian Science Foundation, RSF: 22-18-00593
This research was funded by the Russian Science Foundation, grant number 22-18-00593.
RSCF project card: 22-18-00593
Appears in Collections:Научные публикации ученых УрФУ, проиндексированные в SCOPUS и WoS CC

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