• The 16th-century ruins of Wat That Khao in Chiang Mai, part of the Wiang Kum Kam archaeological site consisting of the remains of a chedi (the
  • 2018 photo of Fort Cornwallis in Penang. During construction works here they found even more cannons! #malaysia #malaysiaarchaeology #cannon #fortcornwallis #fortcornwallispenang #penang #georgetown #colonialarchitecture #southeastasia #southeastasianarchaeology
  • An unusual circular base - likely of stupa(?) - in Ta Som temple, just east of the North Mebon. Ta Som is a 12th century Buddhist sanctuary built during the reign of Jayavarman VII. #angkor #angkortemples #cambodia #cambodianarchaeology #tasom #ruins #angkorarchaeologicalpark #siemreap #archaeology #southeastasia #southeastasianarchaeology
  • This place is usually in total darkness - it
  • Sculpture of Durga (Shiva
  • Pardon the blurry photo, it doesn
  • Repost from @josankhaprasit: a thousand-year-old rope, recovered from the Phanom Surin Shipwreck, now in storage with the National Museum of Thailand. The Phanom Surin Shipwreck is a 9th century Indian Ocean vessel wrecked on the shores of Thailand, and now in inland Samut Sakhon province. The shipwreck is currently being investigated by the Fine Arts Department. #phanomsurinshipwreck #samutsakhon #thailand #rope #fibre #thaiarchaeology #southeastasianarchaeology
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#shipwreck #underwaterarchaeology #artifacts #archaeology #fineartsdepartment #เรือพนมสุรินทร์ #สมุทรสาคร
  • Chiang Saen is a Lanna-period town that was controlled by the Burmese and Siamese at different times. Today it sits on the Thai side of the border, near the Golden Triangle separating Myanmar, Laos and Thailand. The walled city was a major centre of Buddhism for the Lanna kingdom, and there are numerous temple ruins to explore. Blog post in Bio! #chiangsaen #chiangrai #thailand #thaiarchaeology #chiangsaenmuseum #southeastasianarchaeology #ancientarchitecture #northernthailand #lannastyle #goldentriangle #archaeology #thaihistory #myanmararchaeology #konbaungdynasty #temple #tourismthailand #visitthailand #amazingthailand #watpasak #stupa #ancientruins
  • A piece of impressed pottery at the Nong Ratchawat site in Thailand. I’m out in the field today! With colleagues from @seameospafa, Silpakorn University and the Fine Arts Department filming training videos (more details on those soon). It’s nice to be down in the dirt again... #archaeology #thailand #suphanburi #neolithic #ceramics #nongratchawat #thaiarchaeology #southeastasianarchaeology #fieldwork
  • My last post of the year on the main website is a bumper issue on the highlights from this past year in Southeast Asian Archaeology. Link in the bio or here:https://www.southeastasianarchaeology.com/2020/12/29/southeast-asian-archaeology-2020-year-in-review/
#southeastasianarchaeology #yearinreview
Sunday, April 18, 2021
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Home » Vietnam » [Paper] The acid test: An experimental microarchaeological study of guano-driven diagenesis in tropical cave sediments

[Paper] The acid test: An experimental microarchaeological study of guano-driven diagenesis in tropical cave sediments

Tags: caveCon Moong Cave (site)Journal of Archaeological Science: Reportsresearch papers
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Source: The Conversation 20210406

Source: The Conversation 20210406

via Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, June 2021: This paper is batshit! Literally – an examination of how guano affects archaeological remains, based on reseach at the Con Moong Cave. Somone nominate them for an Ignobel please.

Caves in tropical regions form a key resource for those reconstructing human evolution and dispersals. However, the complex sedimentary records they contain remain under-interpreted because of the poorly constrained effects of humid tropical climates upon archaeological site formation processes. Guano-driven phosphatic diagenesis impacts archaeological preservation in caves, but atypical features observed in guano layers in prominent Southeast Asian archaeological sites suggested that hot and humid conditions had promoted the formation of distinctive sedimentary environments with unknown effects on assemblage taphonomy. Few reference data exist that are relevant to geomorphic processes in tropical caves and this laboratory-based modern analogue study was designed to conclusively relate analytical observations to sedimentary palaeoenvironments and explore their effects on assemblage taphonomy. Stratigraphic models were kept under simulated tropical conditions, each containing an identical range of faunal remains, organic materials and mineralss, which was buried in wet bat guano. These were excavated, one per month over 24 months, while nine further stratigraphic models were used to control for environmental variables. Sedimentary environments were investigated using sedimentological characterisations of excavated sediments, while post-depositional alterations to buried materials were investigated through optical and scanning electron microscopic analysis of thin-section samples combined with chemical characterisations of excavated samples through Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Experimental conditions prevented the sediment acidification that is typically associated with guano-driven diagenesis, but buried materials were severely, and distinctively, diagenetically altered. Organic decomposition in guano, bamboo and charcoal was associated with the activities of sulphate-reducing bacteria, but diagenetic alterations affecting charcoal remain poorly resolved due to variation in the experimental assemblage. Bone was discoloured and affected by dissolution, recrystallisation and alteration to secondary minerals, including gypsum, while carbonates reprecipitated as calcium phosphates and non-stochiometric mineral species. Diagenesis of clay minerals was observed, but related diagenetic trajectories remain poorly resolved. These alterations provide micromorphological and mineralogical indicators of sedimentary palaeoenvironments in the earliest stages of burial and this experiment provides a framework within which to understand the taphonomy of archaeological materials in tropical caves.

Source: The acid test: An experimental microarchaeological study of guano-driven diagenesis in tropical cave sediments – ScienceDirect

See also:

  • A batshit experiment: bones cooked in bat poo lift the lid on how archaeological sites are formed | The Conversation, 06 April 2021

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