The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions

The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses are widely used as standards in the chemical analysis of archaeological and historical glasses, as their compositions were designed to approximate those of major glass types in antiquity. Since their development in the 1960s, their compositions have been...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College London 2017-02-01
Series:Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/39/
id doaj-5fc9089ef344423ebb6c6f6ba2f60fa8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5fc9089ef344423ebb6c6f6ba2f60fa82021-05-24T17:44:02ZengUniversity College LondonPapers from the Institute of Archaeology2041-90152017-02-0127110.5334/pia-515The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” CompositionsThe Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses are widely used as standards in the chemical analysis of archaeological and historical glasses, as their compositions were designed to approximate those of major glass types in antiquity. Since their development in the 1960s, their compositions have been revisited and updated. This paper provides a brief overview of the Corning glasses, and addresses two of the last three elements to be re-evaluated: the recommended values for the concentrations of SO3 and Cl were, until now, based on theoretical values. Data for these elements were collected using electron microprobe, and used together with published data to suggest new values. Finally, a complete list with the most up-to-date compositions for the four Corning glasses is compiled for the benefit of other analysts.https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/39/methodologyreference standardscorninganalysisglassarchaeometry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
spellingShingle The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
methodology
reference standards
corning
analysis
glass
archaeometry
title_short The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
title_full The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
title_fullStr The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
title_full_unstemmed The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses: New Values for “Old” Compositions
title_sort corning archaeological reference glasses: new values for “old” compositions
publisher University College London
series Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
issn 2041-9015
publishDate 2017-02-01
description The Corning Archaeological Reference Glasses are widely used as standards in the chemical analysis of archaeological and historical glasses, as their compositions were designed to approximate those of major glass types in antiquity. Since their development in the 1960s, their compositions have been revisited and updated. This paper provides a brief overview of the Corning glasses, and addresses two of the last three elements to be re-evaluated: the recommended values for the concentrations of SO3 and Cl were, until now, based on theoretical values. Data for these elements were collected using electron microprobe, and used together with published data to suggest new values. Finally, a complete list with the most up-to-date compositions for the four Corning glasses is compiled for the benefit of other analysts.
topic methodology
reference standards
corning
analysis
glass
archaeometry
url https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/39/
_version_ 1721428330230579200