The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker

Abstract A white pigment found on a sub-set of polychromed wooden Andean ritual drinking cups called qeros has been characterized by X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy as consisting principally of cristobalite (SiO2), anatase (TiO2), and α-quartz (SiO2). This u...

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Main Authors: Ellen Howe, Emily Kaplan, Richard Newman, James H. Frantz, Ellen Pearlstein, Judith Levinson, Odile Madden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-07-01
Series:Heritage Science
Subjects:
XRD
XRF
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0207-0
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spelling doaj-6ab85b3723dd4f6f97dbbf367a4ac99a2020-11-25T00:31:07ZengSpringerOpenHeritage Science2050-74452018-07-016111210.1186/s40494-018-0207-0The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological markerEllen Howe0Emily Kaplan1Richard Newman2James H. Frantz3Ellen Pearlstein4Judith Levinson5Odile Madden6Metropolitan Museum of ArtSmithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, Cultural Resources CenterScientific Research Lab, Museum of Fine ArtsMetropolitan Museum of ArtUniversity of California Los AngelesAmerican Museum of Natural HistorySmithsonian Museum Conservation InstituteAbstract A white pigment found on a sub-set of polychromed wooden Andean ritual drinking cups called qeros has been characterized by X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy as consisting principally of cristobalite (SiO2), anatase (TiO2), and α-quartz (SiO2). This unexpected assemblage of minerals is like that reportedly found in an exposed titanium ore body in southern Peru, an area once part of the Inka Empire. The ore is a close match in color and composition to the white pigment found on the qeros and offers a possible candidate for the geological source of this material. The temporal horizon for the use of this pigment appears to be ca. 1532–1570, correlating with what we refer to here as the Transitional Inka/Early Colonial period, although production of polychromed qeros may have begun before this time and certainly continued well into the eighteenth century or later. Not long after the arrival of the Spanish, this titanium dioxide/silica pigment was replaced by lead white, a result of Spanish influence. We suggest that white pigments on qeros offer material evidence for establishing a chronology for these ritual vessels and that the titanium dioxide/silica pigment on this group of qeros constitutes a previously unidentified, naturally occurring white pigment indigenous to the southern Andes, the first use of which probably dates to the Pre-Columbian period.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0207-0XRDXRFRaman spectroscopyQeroColonialAndes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ellen Howe
Emily Kaplan
Richard Newman
James H. Frantz
Ellen Pearlstein
Judith Levinson
Odile Madden
spellingShingle Ellen Howe
Emily Kaplan
Richard Newman
James H. Frantz
Ellen Pearlstein
Judith Levinson
Odile Madden
The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
Heritage Science
XRD
XRF
Raman spectroscopy
Qero
Colonial
Andes
author_facet Ellen Howe
Emily Kaplan
Richard Newman
James H. Frantz
Ellen Pearlstein
Judith Levinson
Odile Madden
author_sort Ellen Howe
title The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
title_short The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
title_full The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
title_fullStr The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
title_full_unstemmed The occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden Andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
title_sort occurrence of a titanium dioxide/silica white pigment on wooden andean qeros: a cultural and chronological marker
publisher SpringerOpen
series Heritage Science
issn 2050-7445
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract A white pigment found on a sub-set of polychromed wooden Andean ritual drinking cups called qeros has been characterized by X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy as consisting principally of cristobalite (SiO2), anatase (TiO2), and α-quartz (SiO2). This unexpected assemblage of minerals is like that reportedly found in an exposed titanium ore body in southern Peru, an area once part of the Inka Empire. The ore is a close match in color and composition to the white pigment found on the qeros and offers a possible candidate for the geological source of this material. The temporal horizon for the use of this pigment appears to be ca. 1532–1570, correlating with what we refer to here as the Transitional Inka/Early Colonial period, although production of polychromed qeros may have begun before this time and certainly continued well into the eighteenth century or later. Not long after the arrival of the Spanish, this titanium dioxide/silica pigment was replaced by lead white, a result of Spanish influence. We suggest that white pigments on qeros offer material evidence for establishing a chronology for these ritual vessels and that the titanium dioxide/silica pigment on this group of qeros constitutes a previously unidentified, naturally occurring white pigment indigenous to the southern Andes, the first use of which probably dates to the Pre-Columbian period.
topic XRD
XRF
Raman spectroscopy
Qero
Colonial
Andes
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0207-0
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