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Abstract |
<p>Fresh, weathered, archaeological and fossilized bones were subjected to a series of abrasion experiments using fine sand in an annular flume in order to link bone-surface abrasion to flow regimes and sediment transport modes, compare these effects on bones of different states, and quantify the extent and types of wear occurring. Flow velocities were chosen to replicate the predominant transport modes of bedload, saltation and suspension. Comparative scanning electron microscopic image analysis was performed to assess the degree and type of wear occurring on each bone type for the different transport modes over a range of exposure periods from 24 to 72 h. These preliminary investigations have shown that both the amount and type of wear experienced was related to the bone type, duration of exposure and the mode of sediment transport with wear being the result of deformation, rather than cutting wear. The formation of scour pits in the sand bed on the upstream side of the bone samples significantly reduced wear, and appears to be an important control mechanism for impact related wear that has been overlooked until now.</p> |
Year of Publication |
2011
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Journal |
Journal of Archaeological Science
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Volume |
38
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Number of Pages |
784\textendash793
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ISSN Number |
0305-4403
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URL |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2010.11.001
|
DOI |
10.1016/j.jas.2010.11.001
|
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