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Cultural and technology elucidation of the Tupi-Guarani tradition through analysis of potsherds from Travessão do Rio Vermelho site (Santa Catarina - Brazil) by spectroscopy, SEM-EDS and chemometrics.

Authors
  • Costa, Thiago G1
  • Mangrich, Antônio Sálvio2
  • Hübner, Morgana H Z3
  • Correia, Marcelino D de M3
  • da Silva Müller, Isabela4
  • Reis, Lucas Bond5
  • Dos Santos, Sailer S6
  • Machado, Juliana Salles4
  • Bueno, Lucas5
  • Dos Santos, Felipe Rodrigues7
  • Lopes, Fábio7
Type
Published Article
Journal
Applied radiation and isotopes : including data, instrumentation and methods for use in agriculture, industry and medicine
Publication Date
Sep 20, 2021
Volume
178
Pages
109957–109957
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1016/j.apradiso.2021.109957
PMID: 34592693
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

Ceramic fragments can provide an insight into the ancient culture and practices of groups of humans and their way of life (technology, cultural identity, social organization, habitation and economy). Scientific analysis can be used to obtain information on the ceramic production process, as well as the specificities of the material employed. In this research, all samples of archaeological potsherd from the Tupi-Guarani tradition were analyzed in order to identify and to characterize the structures, morphologies and the elemental composition by using by scanning electron microscopy (SEM-EDS) and multivariate statistical methods (PCA and HCA). FTIR spectroscopy revealed the presence of an organic residue in three samples along with carbonates, clay minerals, quartz and hematite. In addition, the presence of the stretching attributed to water molecules in crystalline systems was observed. Also, the presence of TiO2 in the anatase polymorphic form was detected using μ-Raman spectroscopy. These results indicate a firing temperature of between 800 and 1000 °C. In relation to the morphology, all samples revealed amorphous structures presenting isolated and heterogenic particles of different forms and sizes, and the EDS spectrum confirmed the elements present in the molecular structures elucidated by vibrational spectroscopy. The multivariate analysis has confirmed the correlation between the elemental compositions of ceramics collected from two different sites: a mountain region and a coastal area in Santa Catarina State, Brazil. Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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