At Santa Filitica, a Roman settlement in north-western Sardinia occupied until the 9th century AD, archaeological excavations have found the remnants of a furnace consisting of a semi-circular base made of stony slabs and tiles bound with clay. The furnace is attached to awall of Roman age. Layers of the 6th century AD, bearing several variously oxidized slags, were found close to the furnace. These findings firstly testify to an iron works in Sardinia, within a well-defined context. XRPD and SEM–EDS mineralogical and textural analyses suggest that the slags derive from a bloomery and smithing work that was the first evidence of this type documented in Sardinia during the Early Middle Ages. Chemical analyses (performed with ICP and INAA) of rare earth elements and trace elements in two slags and in two Sardinian iron deposits allow some conclusions to be drawn on the local provenance of the ore. Our comparison of the Sardinian findings and some slags representative of archaeological smelting sites in front of Elba island―the largest and long lived ironworking sites in the Mediterranean―also improves the methodology with which iron slags derived from different ores are compared.

FIRST FINDING OF EARLY MEDIEVAL IRON SLAGS IN SARDINIA (ITALY): A GEOCHEMICAL–MINERALOGICAL APPROACH TO INSIGHTS INTO ORE PROVENANCE AND WORK ACTIVITY

MONGELLI, Giovanni;
2014-01-01

Abstract

At Santa Filitica, a Roman settlement in north-western Sardinia occupied until the 9th century AD, archaeological excavations have found the remnants of a furnace consisting of a semi-circular base made of stony slabs and tiles bound with clay. The furnace is attached to awall of Roman age. Layers of the 6th century AD, bearing several variously oxidized slags, were found close to the furnace. These findings firstly testify to an iron works in Sardinia, within a well-defined context. XRPD and SEM–EDS mineralogical and textural analyses suggest that the slags derive from a bloomery and smithing work that was the first evidence of this type documented in Sardinia during the Early Middle Ages. Chemical analyses (performed with ICP and INAA) of rare earth elements and trace elements in two slags and in two Sardinian iron deposits allow some conclusions to be drawn on the local provenance of the ore. Our comparison of the Sardinian findings and some slags representative of archaeological smelting sites in front of Elba island―the largest and long lived ironworking sites in the Mediterranean―also improves the methodology with which iron slags derived from different ores are compared.
2014
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11563/40051
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