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To put a cedar ship in a bottle: dendroprovenancing three ancient East Mediterranean watercraft with the 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratio
Rich, S.; Manning, S.W.; Degryse, P.; Vanhaecke, F.; Latruwe, K.; Van Lerberghe, K. (2016). To put a cedar ship in a bottle: dendroprovenancing three ancient East Mediterranean watercraft with the 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratio. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 9: 514-521. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.08.034
In: Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. Elsevier. ISSN 2352-409X, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Author keywords
    Isotope geochemistry; Wood provenance; Shipbuilding; Resource acquisition; Timber trade; Strontium isotopes; True cedars

Authors  Top 
  • Rich, S.
  • Manning, S.W.
  • Degryse, P., more
  • Vanhaecke, F., more
  • Latruwe, K., more
  • Van Lerberghe, K., more

Abstract
    This paper presents the latest provenance results of cedar wood (Cedrus sp.) from three ancient watercraft: the Carnegie boat (Middle Kingdom Egypt), the wrecked merchant ship at Uluburun (Bronze Age Mediterranean), and the galley comprising the Athlit Ram (Hellenistic Mediterranean). Comparing the ratios of 87Sr/86Sr of the archaeological wood and cedar from modern forests has helped augment the existing hypotheses pertaining to where the wood used in the construction of these vessels originated. The results demonstrate that strontium isotopic analysis can provide valuable information to assist wood provenance research in ancient and maritime contexts, which in turn may elucidate ancient forestry and shipbuilding practices.

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