1. Chemical Analysis of 17th-century Red Glass Trade Beads from Northeastern North America and Amsterdam.
- Author
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Sempowski, M.L., Nohe, A.W., Hancock, R.G.V., Moreau, J.-F., Kwok, F., Aufreiter, S., Karklins, K., Baart, J., Garrad, C., and Kenyon, I.
- Subjects
GLASS beads ,ANALYTICAL chemistry - Abstract
Seventeenth-century opaque red (redwood) glass trade beads of different shapes and sizes were made of mixed alkali (mainly soda)–lime glasses and were coloured with Cu, presumably as cuprous oxide or as finely dispersed elemental Cu. During the early 17th century, beads of all shapes were opacified with Sn; cored beads, with uncoloured cores and hence lower Cu levels, also tended to have slightly lower Sn contents than uncored beads. By the mid-17th century, cored tubular beads were being opacified with a combination of Sn and Sb, a technological change similar to that observed in white glass trade beads, while uncored redwood beads appear not to have been opacified with either Sn or Sb. Bead chemistries are sufficiently different to allow them to be sorted into subgroups, which may then be tracked in various archaeological sites and regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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