Surface chromium on Terracotta Army bronze weapons is neither an ancient anti-rust treatment nor the reason for their good preservation
University of Cambridge · Department of Archaeology · +4 more institutions
Abstract
For forty years, there has been a widely held belief that over 2,000 years ago the Chinese Qin developed an advanced chromate conversion coating technology (CCC) to prevent metal corrosion. This belief was based on the detection of chromium traces on the surface of bronze weapons buried with the Chinese Terracotta Army, and the same weapons' very good preservation. We analysed weapons, lacquer and soils from the site, and conducted experimental replications of CCC and accelerated ageing. Our results show that surface chromium presence is correlated with artefact typology and uncorrelated with bronze preservation. Furthermore we show that the lacquer used to cover warriors and certain parts of weapons is rich…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 1798.12
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
14- MMMarcos Martinón‐TorresCorresponding
University of Cambridge, Department of Archaeology
- XLXiuzhen Li
Museum of London Archaeology, University College London
- YXYin Xia
- ABAgnese Benzonelli
Museum of London Archaeology, University College London
- ABAndrew Bevan
Museum of London Archaeology, University College London
Topics & keywords
- Lacquer
- Bronze
- Chromium
- Chromate conversion coating
- Rust (programming language)
- Archaeology
- Metallurgy
- Trachyte