Alum-treatment was extensively applied to archaeological wood from the Oseberg collection in the early 1900s, and was a common conservation method at the time involving impregnating objects with hot concentrated solutions of potassium alum (KAl(SO4)2⋅12H2O). This now obsolete consolidation method has led to dramatic long-term consequences, heavily affecting the state of preservation of the historical wooden artefacts, and dedicated chemical characterisation campaigns have been undertaken to better understand the degradation processes and aid development of re-treatment strategies. Analyses with Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), elemental microanalysis, and ion chromatography (IC) was performed, suggesting the presence of ammon...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
The present work describes a thoroughly analytical study of the chemical changes produced in waterlo...
Alum-treatment was extensively applied to archaeological wood from the Oseberg collection in the ear...
From the mid-1800s to the late 1960s, conservation by alum salts (KAl(SO4)2·12H2O—potassium aluminiu...
The Oseberg collection includes the most complete ensemble of wooden remains from the Viking Age. Ho...
Alum-treated archaeological woods from the Oseberg collection, excavated and treated in the early 19...
Alum, with glycerol and various surface coatings, was routinely used during the early 1900’s as a co...
Alum-treated wooden artefacts from the Oseberg collection display a great deal of morphological, str...
Alum-treated wooden artefacts suffer from extreme deterioration, and the stability of these objects ...
Wooden artefacts from the Oseberg collection contain various metal compounds arising from factors su...
Abstract From the mid-1800s to the late 1950s, conservation by alum salts (aluminum potassium sulfat...
Oxygen consumption measurement was used to study potential oxidative degradation reactions occurring...
The Viking Age wooden artefacts recovered in the early 1900s from the Oseberg mound (Norway) and tre...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
The present work describes a thoroughly analytical study of the chemical changes produced in waterlo...
Alum-treatment was extensively applied to archaeological wood from the Oseberg collection in the ear...
From the mid-1800s to the late 1960s, conservation by alum salts (KAl(SO4)2·12H2O—potassium aluminiu...
The Oseberg collection includes the most complete ensemble of wooden remains from the Viking Age. Ho...
Alum-treated archaeological woods from the Oseberg collection, excavated and treated in the early 19...
Alum, with glycerol and various surface coatings, was routinely used during the early 1900’s as a co...
Alum-treated wooden artefacts from the Oseberg collection display a great deal of morphological, str...
Alum-treated wooden artefacts suffer from extreme deterioration, and the stability of these objects ...
Wooden artefacts from the Oseberg collection contain various metal compounds arising from factors su...
Abstract From the mid-1800s to the late 1950s, conservation by alum salts (aluminum potassium sulfat...
Oxygen consumption measurement was used to study potential oxidative degradation reactions occurring...
The Viking Age wooden artefacts recovered in the early 1900s from the Oseberg mound (Norway) and tre...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
This work is part of a larger study, which aims to use soda lignin from straw as the starting point ...
The present work describes a thoroughly analytical study of the chemical changes produced in waterlo...