| Literature DB >> 28393120 |
Daniele Chiriu1, Pier Carlo Ricci1, Carlo Maria Carbonaro1, Davide Nadali2, Andrea Polcaro3, Paul Collins4.
Abstract
Cuneiform tablets tell the life and culture of Sumerian people in a sort of black and white tale because of the binary engraving technique. A leading question arises: did Mesopotamian people apply some kind of colour to decorate their tablets or to put emphasis on selected words? Some administrative and literary Sumerian cuneiform tablets of mid-third Millennium B.C. from the site of Kish (central Mesopotamia, modern Iraq) were dug up in twentieth-century and stored at the Ashmolean Museum of the Oxford University. Non-destructive micro-Raman spectroscopy is a powerful technique to detect the presence of residual pigments eventually applied to the engraving signs. Yellow, orange, red and white pigments have been detected and a possible identification has been proposed in this work. In particular yellow pigments are identified as Crocoite (PbCrO4), Lead stannate (Pb2SnO4); red pigments - hematite (Fe2O3) and cuprite (Cu2O); White pigments - Lead carbonate (PbCO3), calcium phosphate (Ca3(PO4)2), titanium dioxide (TiO2), gypsum (CaSO4.2H2O); orange pigment a composition of red and yellow compounds. These results suggest that Sumerian people invented a new editorial style, to overcome the binary logic of engraving process and catch the reader's eye by decorating cuneiform tablets. Finally, the coloured rendering of the tablet in their original view is proposed.Entities:
Keywords: Analytical chemistry; Archaeology; Physical chemistry
Year: 2017 PMID: 28393120 PMCID: PMC5367865 DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2017.e00272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heliyon ISSN: 2405-8440
Fig. 1Analyzed cuneiform tablets from Ashmolean Museum − Oxford.
Fig. 2Tablet 1924–468 (both sides) and collected Raman spectra in representative points (q = Quartz; # = Calcium Phosphate; § = Cerrussite; τ = Titanium Oxide; ° = Calcium oxide/hydroxide; * = Crocoite; ç = Hematite). Inset: Quartz crystals on the surface.
Identified compounds and pigments in tablets. Sample 468 refers to Fig. 2, sample 465 refers to Fig. 3. Detail on samples 469, 462, 464 and 466 are reported in the Supplementary Material (SM).
| Sample | Pigment/compound With references | Symb. in figures | Formula | Colour | Main peaks (cm−1) | Points in figures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chrome Yellow (Crocoite) | * | PbCrO4 | PigmentYellow | 355, 844 | a,c,d | |
| Quartz | q | SiO2 | PigmentWhite lucent | 463, 510 | a,g | |
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | ° | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | 690, 780 | b,h,i,j,l,m,n | ||
| Titanium oxide | τ | TiO2 | PigmentWhite | 145, 198, 235, 399, 445, 516, 610, 640 | e,h,i,j | |
| Lead White (Cerussite − Hydrocerussite) | § | PbCO3 | PigmentWhite | 1053, 830 | f | |
| Calcium Phosphate | # | Ca3(PO4)2 | PigmentWhite | 975, 430, 1054 | g, f | |
| Hematite | ç | Fe2O3 | PigmentRed | 224, 291, 407, 494, 610 | k | |
| Quartz | q | SiO2 | White lucent | 463, 510 | a,b | |
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | ° | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | Clay | 690, 780 | a,b,d,e | |
| Calcite/Vaterite | @ | CaCO3 | PigmentWhite | 283, 1087 | a,b,c, | |
| Lead Tin Yellow | + | Pb2SnO4 | PigmentYellow | 125, 197 | d | |
| Gypsum | & | CaSO4.2H2O | PigmentWhite | 1007, 1140 | d | |
| Cuprite | x | Cu2O | PigmentRed | 228, 410 | d | |
| Titanium oxide (Anatase) | τ | TiO2 | PigmentWhite | 145, 198, 399, 516, 640 | e | |
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | Clay | 690, 780 | a,b,c,d | ||
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | Clay | 690, 780 | all points | ||
| Hematite | Fe2O3 | PigmentRed | 224, 291, 407, 494, 610 | i | ||
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | Clay | 690, 780 | a,b,d,g | ||
| Hematite | Fe2O3 | Clay | 224, 291, 407, 494, 610 | a,b,d,g,e,f | ||
| Calcite | CaCO3 | PigmentWhite | 283, 1087 | c | ||
| Calcium oxide/hydroxide | CaO/Ca(OH)2 | Clay | 690, 780 | a,b,c,d |
Fig. 3Tablet 1924–465 (only written side) and collected Raman spectra in representative points (q = Quartz; τ = Titanium Oxide; ° = Calcium oxide/hydroxide; + = Lead Stannate; X = Cuprite; @ = Vaterite; & = Gypsum).
The transliteration process for Tablet 1924–465.
| Column 1 | Column 2 |
|---|---|
| 1. 7(barig@c) zi3 | 1. 1(asz@c) x x x |
| 2. lugal-a2-mah | blank space |
| 3. 1(barig@c) har-tu | |
| 4. 3(asz@c) |GA2xHA| | |
| 5. x-sag | |
| 6. 3(asz@c) |GA2xHA| | |
| 7. me-x-su#-x |
Fig. 4Proposal of coloured rendering of the tablet 1924–468 and 1924–465.