INTRODUCTION
Archival wood and charcoal collections from the ancestral places of diverse Native American peoples in what is now the central and southeastern United States (known archaeologically as Mississippian), hold considerable importance as a source of chronometric information. While annual dendrochronological dating of archaeological wood and charcoal from the region remains challenging due to incomplete spatiotemporal coverage of long tree-ring chronologies, radiocarbon wiggle-matching provides a means to overcome these challenges by anchoring floating chronologies in time and providing archaeologists with high-resolution dates. If archival collections are to be utilized routinely for high-precision tree-ring based chronometry, challenges related to past conservation practices must be addressed. This paper outlines a study with the objective of providing high-resolution wiggle-matched dates for the terminal occupation of a Mississippian earthen mound from archival charcoal tree-ring segments. To accomplish this, we had to confront the issue of systematic contamination of charcoal by paraffin consolidants—a once widespread practice in American archaeology. This study was largely successful in removing paraffin contamination, and our dates provide high-resolution estimates for the era of peak sociopolitical complexity at the Kincaid Site.
History of Kincaid and Mound 10
Archaeological charcoal specimens analyzed here are the remains of architectural elements excavated in 1938 from the top of Mound 10 at the Kincaid site by the University of Chicago (Cole Reference Cole1951). Kincaid was a Mississippian (AD 1000–1540, all dates are calendar years AD) political or religious center located on the floodplain of the lower Ohio River in what is now southern Illinois. Mound 10—situated north of the central plaza—is the largest monument at Kincaid (Figure 1). The earliest Mississippian village levels at the site (Early Kincaid) may date to the eleventh century (Butler et al. Reference Butler, Welch, Brennan and Pursell2014), and ceramic cross-dating suggests the most intense occupation occurred between 1200 and 1300 (Middle Kincaid), when Kincaid is believed to have been a major socio-political and ceremonial center (Muller Reference Muller and Smith1978). This interval likely witnessed the incorporation of diverse communities in distinct settlements adjacent to the core of Kincaid, the construction of the first palisade wall, mound building, and the emergence of marked material differentiation among households (Brennan Reference Brennan2014). Late in this period (Late Kincaid) or soon after, a massive expansion of the ritual and sociopolitical built landscape occurred coincident with a possible reduction of population and the physical footprint of the site (Brennan and Pursell 2020). This also traditionally demarcates the start of the decline phase at Kincaid (Butler Reference Butler1991), and current syntheses suggest that the area was depopulated by the middle fifteenth century (Cobb and Butler Reference Cobb and Butler2002).
A few absolute dates for mound construction suggest that mound building associated with Middle Kincaid began around 1200. A single 14C assay from the West Mound dates to between 1160 and 1280 and maize from Mound 4 dates to a similar time-period (Butler et al. Reference Butler, Clay, Hargrave, Peterson, Schwegman, Schwegman and Welch2011). A floating red cedar tree-ring chronology from a pre-mound level below Mound 4 has been recently anchored to after 1170 (Kessler et al. Reference Kessler, Guebard, Hodgins and Hoedl2022). The timing of the subsequent expansion of the Kincaid built environment is informed by features buried under the edge of Mound 8 dating to ca. 1270–1430, a feature in the upper levels of West Mound dating to 1270–1400, a house on the main plaza dating to 1290–1400, as well as two dates from palisade walls in the same general time frame (Butler et al. Reference Butler, Clay, Hargrave, Peterson, Schwegman, Schwegman and Welch2011). Given the wide errors of the existing ceramic and 14C chronologies, the order and timing of events within particular phases are unknown. This makes it impossible to discriminate short-term events or judge the tempo of the historical changes occurring at the site.
No independent dates exist for Mound 10 but the abundance of late Kincaid artifacts in the upper levels—the most thoroughly excavated part of the mound—suggest that it dates to the latter part of Kincaid history (Pursell 2016). Mound 10 consists of a long, truncated, platform mound and a conjoined conical platform. Excavators believe that Mound 10 was constructed in multiple stages with each stage dramatically altering its appearance (Emerson Reference Emerson1943) (Figure 2). Stage 1 involved the raising of a low truncate or three separate truncate mounds supporting at least one circular structure (Truncate Stratum IV and V in Cole Reference Cole1951:95). Stage 2 saw the mound or mounds covered with fresh fill forming a long low truncate mound with a small platform on top but with no evidence of structures (Truncate Stratum III and II in Cole Reference Cole1951:95). During Stage 3 successive fills were added to form a higher truncate supporting both palisaded and open access buildings (Truncate Stratum I in Cole Reference Cole1951:95–96), at which time the conical mound was added with additional structures near its base (Conical Stratum III in Cole Reference Cole1951:100). Finally, in Stage 4 the conical mound was heightened, and steps were added ascending the east side (Conical Stratum I in Cole Reference Cole1951:100). At this stage, the conical portion of Mound 10 supported a single structure emplaced in a cuplike depression surrounded by an earthen berm or rampart (Pursell 2016:122). Charcoal samples analyzed in this study (Table 1) provide chronometric information directly related to the later stages of the mound construction, specifically Stages 3 and 4.
Paraffin Consolidants and Their Removal
The treatment of wood and charcoal with chemical consolidants is long-standing practice in archaeological conservation. Treatments range from surface coatings to substances that penetrate wood structure (Barbour Reference Barbour1990; Western Reference Western1969). For the past several decades, Acryloid B-72, Butvar 90 and 98, Polyethylene glycol (PEG), Klucel G, as well as newer natural polymers have been applied to dry or waterlogged wood and charcoal to preserve anatomical features, improve durability for transport and storage, and arrest biological degradation (Kaye Reference Kaye1995; Triantafyllou et al. Reference Triantafyllou, Papachristodoulou and Pournou2010; Arista Reference Arista2013; Walsh et al. Reference Walsh, Janeček, Hodgkinson, Sedlmair, Koutsioubas, Spring, Welch, Hirschmugl, Toprakcioglu and Nitschke2014, Reference Walsh, Janeček, Jones and Scherman2017; Walsh-Korb and Avérous Reference Walsh-Korb and Avérous2019). In the early and middle 20th century, natural and hydrocarbon waxes were also used to similar effect for both wood and charcoal. Paraffin wax in a molten state, and in solution with solvents, has been used to conserve a wide range of fragile materials for nearly a century in archaeology (Western Reference Western1969; Ramer Reference Ramer1979; Hatchfield and Koestler Reference Hatchfield and Koestler1987; Schaefer and Mills Reference Schaefer and Mills2017), and until fairly recently, paraffin-gasoline solution was widely used to preserve charred structural wood recovered from Precontact archaeological sites across the U.S. for dendrochronological analysis (Towner Reference Towner2015). The use of gasoline and paraffin is discouraged today because of risks associated with the fumes and the flammability of the samples, but some dendrochronologists continue to recommend chemical stabilization with substances such as polyethylene glycol for some samples (for example Koerner et al. Reference Koerner, Grissino-Mayer, Sullivan and Deweese2009).
The major problem with chemical stabilization past and present is that it complicates 14C dating. This is significant as the AMS dating of sequential tree-rings (wiggle-matching) is contributing high-resolution dates to critical archaeological sequences. Wiggle-matching can be used in conjunction with dendrochronological analysis (Manning et al. Reference Manning, Kromer, Ramsey, Pearson, Talamo, Trano and Watkins2010, Reference Manning, Dee, Wild, Ramsey, Bandy, Creasman, Griggs, Pearson, Shortland and Steier2014, Reference Manning, Griggs, Lorentzen, Barjamovic, Ramsey, Kromer and Wild2016; Pearson et al. Reference Pearson, Brewer, Brown, Heaton, Hodgins, Jull, Lange and Salzer2018, Reference Pearson, Salzer, Wacker, Brewer, Sookdeo and Kuniholm2020; Grabner et al. Reference Grabner, Wächter, Nicolussi, Bolka, Sormaz, Steier, Wild, Barth, Kern and Rudorfer2021; Kessler et al. Reference Kessler, Hodgins, Stambaugh and Adair2021), and in the context of broader 14C dating campaigns (Manning et al. Reference Manning, Birch, Conger, Dee, Griggs, Hadden, Hogg, Ramsey, Sanft and Steier2018; Kessler et al. Reference Kessler, Butler, Brennan, Towner, Welch and Hodgins2022) to provide high-precision dates for cultural deposits. The pervasiveness of paraffin-treated archaeological charcoal in U.S. museum collections is unknown, but may be widespread, considering the popularity of the method for much of the 20th century. If wiggle-matching is to be applied widely to archived wood originally collected for dendrochronological analysis, standard methods for removing paraffin contamination will be required.
Hawley-Bell Collection
The archaeological material for this study is housed in a large collection of charcoal and wood from Mississippian sites collected over 80 years ago in what we refer to as the Hawley-Bell collection. In the 1930s, archaeologists across North America were optimistically collecting tree-ring samples from buried contexts for submission to newly established tree-ring laboratories across the continent (for example Willey Reference Willey1937; Hawley Senter Reference Hawley Senter1938; Weakly Reference Weakly1943). The largest and most systematic project of this time outside of the Southwestern U.S. was undertaken by Florence Hawley and her former student Robert Bell. Their goal was to collect material for new tree-ring chronologies from the numerous Mississippian towns and monumental centers in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States, the age of which was purely speculative (Stahle and Wolfman Reference Stahle and Wolfman1985; Nash and Copenheaver Reference Nash and Copenheaver2017).
The remains of Mississippian structures at these sites are preserved in most cases as burned and charred posts and beams. Charcoal is fragile and liable to disintegrate after drying out and being transported, so a method for stabilizing charcoal was developed by Hawley and collaborators. Correspondence between Bell, Hawley, and others in the field reveals a process of trial and error to adapt dendroarchaeological field methods to these contexts. The procedure that evolved required careful removal of soil adhering to charcoal as it is exposed in excavation, wrapping the sample in cotton gauze and string, and soaking the specimen in paraffin saturated gasoline (Figure 3). Based on our experience with wood preserved in this manner, paraffin is effective (although not perfectly so) at providing physical stability to charcoal specimens.
FTIR Analysis of Contaminated Charcoal
This study used Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) to confirm the presence/absence of paraffin in archaeological charcoal prior to and after pretreatment. FTIR characterizes an array of molecular vibrations in a material via the measurement of the absorption intensity of middle infrared energy (Tasumi Reference Tasumi and Mitsuo2014). Though there are a wide variety of spectrometers, FTIR is unique in its speed and accuracy due to its use of an interferometer that allows all wavelengths of light to be measured simultaneously providing an average signal with low noise (Jaggi and Vij Reference Jaggi and Vij2006). The absorbance or transmittance of the infrared spectrum produced by FTIR is plotted as a function of wavenumber (cm–1) on the horizontal axis with relative intensity on the vertical axis, with intensity related to the proportional contribution of different chemical functional groups that are identified with characteristic wavenumbers (Coates 2005:4). FTIR is commonly used to characterize the vapor and char of biofuel stocks and much of the literature on FTIR analysis of wood, lignin, and cellulose chars stems from this application (Collard and Blin Reference Collard and Blin2014). In archaeology and material conservation sciences, FTIR is also useful when dealing with charcoal and wood. It has been used to discriminate between wood species (Traore et al. Reference Traoré, Kaal and Cortizas2016, Reference Traoré, Kaal and Cortizas2018), in wood provenance studies (Broda and Propescu Reference Broda and Popescu2019), and to detect trace contamination from chemical consolidants (Armitage et al. Reference Armitage, Bueno-Ramírez, de Balbín-Behrmann, Martineau, Carrera-Ramírez, Fairchild and Southon2020). This study is an application of the latter, wherein we use FTIR analysis on archaeological and known-age charcoals to detect paraffin contamination and evaluate the efficacy of a 14C pretreatment protocol.
Charcoal is often described simply as amorphous carbon, but its chemistry is actually much more complex due to variability induced by pyrolysis and diagenesis (Cohen-Ofri et al. Reference Cohen-Ofri, Weiner, Boaretto, Mintz and Weiner2006). Wood charcoal is predominantly derived from lignin and is composed of various organic compounds with the ratios of carbon to hydrogen and oxygen dependent on pyrolysis conditions that determine the degree to which different compounds are released (Collard and Blin Reference Collard and Blin2014). The FTIR spectra of chars from whole wood and lignin tend to be dominated by a broad absorption band above wavenumber 3200 cm–1 due to the presence of O-H single bonds in hydroxyls in myriad contexts within the char, as well as multiple intense peaks between wavenumber 1800–1500 cm–1, attributed to the vibrations of carbonyls and aromatic rings (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004).
Paraffin is a saturated aliphatic compound whose absorption spectrum is dominated by the presence of long hydrocarbon chains. Specifically, a narrow and intense absorption band is observed at 2970–2950 cm–1 and 2880–2860 cm–1 from symmetric and asymmetric C-H stretching of methylene bonds (Coates Reference Coates and Myers2000:5). In charcoal, however, IR (infrared) absorption at these wave numbers is minimal. Some studies observe very low IR absorption in charcoal between 3100–2860 cm–1, a band that reflects C-H stretching in endogenous hydrocarbons (Cao et al. Reference Cao, Xiao, Xu, Shen and Jin2013), although this is not detectable in all charcoals (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004; Trompowski et al. Reference Trompowsky, de Melo Benites, Madari, Pimenta, Hockaday and Hatcher2005). Importantly, for charcoals produced at combustion temperatures ranging from 300–1400°C, the intensity of IR absorption across 2970–2950 cm–1 is lower than the intensity of IR absorption in the region of O-H vibrations (>3200 cm–1) (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004: Figure 7; Liu et al. Reference Liu, Wang, Zheng, Luo and Cen2008: Figure 7; Yu et al. Reference Yu, Liu and Wu2012:7333; Cao et al. Reference Cao, Xiao, Xu, Shen and Jin2013:46). Based upon these observations we suggest that an increase in the IR intensity of the methylene band compared to the O-H band can provide an indicator of the presence of trace paraffin when the hydration level of the sample is controlled. We found this approach useful for interpreting 14C results of paraffin contaminated charcoal.
METHODS AND MATERIALS
This study details the effects of a chloroform – hexane – ethanol – methanol – water solvent sequence for removing paraffin contamination from experimentally charred and contaminated wood as well as paraffin-conserved charcoal from archaeological contexts. The effect of the paraffin removal protocol was evaluated using FTIR and AMS dating.
Archaeological Samples
Charcoal from Mound 10 was recovered from structures enclosed by a palisade wall (context PE) and Feature VIII (F8), both constructed on mound Stage 3, and from the structure on top of the conical platform (CS) associated with Stage 4. The Mound 10 charcoal collection consists of posts and roof poles made from true hickories (Carya glabra Sweet, C. laciniosa Michx. f., C. ovata K. Koch, or C. tomentosa Nutt.), white oak (Quercus alba L. Q. stellata Wang. Q. muehlenbergii Engelm, or Q. macrocarpa Michx.), and eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana L.) (see Table 1). Species were identified using wood anatomical features such as earlywood and latewood pore distribution, parenchyma morphology, ray thickness and density, and the presence/absence of tyloses using standard references (Core et al. Reference Core, Côté and Day1979; Hoadley Reference Hoadley1990). Of the true hickories and white oaks of southern Illinois, C. ovata and Q. alba are perhaps the most plentiful and grow mainly in upland hardwood forests (Fuller et al. Reference Fuller, Nuuttila, Mattoon and Miller1955).
While the stratigraphic origin and general provenience of the samples are known, the context and architectural function of each charcoal specimen is only vaguely recorded. Based on the range of sizes it seems likely that they represent a mixture of roof poles, wall poles, and support posts. Charcoal selected for dating was preserved as complete and broken cross-sections. Sample mxo10-28D from Layer IB had remnants of bark demonstrating that the final growth ring was preserved and therefore likely dates the year of tree procurement (cutting date). Sample mxo10-7 from the top of the conical mound is interpreted as a small diameter pole, which based on the presence of a final growth ring across its entire circumference, also probably represents a cutting date. Sample mxo10-173 is subjectively considered a cutting date since its outermost surface resembled the contoured outer (waney), non-eroded, edge of a tree beneath the bark. The remainder of the samples lack indications of the true outermost ring and are interpreted as non-cutting dates with an unknown number of rings missing from their exteriors.
Charcoal Production
Known-age wood was obtained from bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa) trees sampled as cross-sections from north-central Kansas, USA in 2011 and archived at the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research in Tucson, Arizona. A total of 1398 mg of wood was collected from rings dated as AD 1907. Samples were charred in an anoxic environment at 350°C for 60 min. While prehistoric hearths reached temperatures of over 600°C, researchers estimate that temperatures between 300–400 degrees results in the preservation of most archaeological botanical remains (Braadbaart et al. Reference Braadbaart, Boon, van der Horst and van Bergen2004; Lancelotti et al. Reference Lancelotti, Madella, Ajithprasad and Petrie2010). Samples were packed in 9 mm diameter 325 mm long glass tubes stopped with quartz wool 50–60 mm from tube opening. Samples were placed under vacuum and pumped down to −27 Hg. Sample tubes were inserted into a tube furnace preheated to 350°C and left for 60 min while the temperature was monitored. Samples were allowed to cool under vacuum.
Paraffin Contamination
Subsamples of the known-age charcoal weighing between 60 to 120 mg were randomly selected for experimental paraffin contamination and pretreatment. A portion of each selected experimentally contaminated sample was reserved as an uncontaminated control. In a 150 mL beaker, Gulf Wax brand household paraffin was stirred into 50 mL of hexanes in ca. 1 g amounts until dissolution ceased at room temperature—or ca. 6 g of solid paraffin to 50 mL of hexanes for these trials. Charcoal pieces were then immersed in the hexane-paraffin solution until air bubbles were no longer observed emerging from wood vessels (about 5 min). The samples were then completely dried and sealed in scintillation vials.
Solvent Wash
14C samples contaminated with paraffin wax require additional solvent washes prior to Acid-Base-Acid treatment (Brock et al. Reference Brock, Dee, Hughes, Snoeck, Staff and Bronk Ramsey2018; Bruhn et al. Reference Bruhn, Duhr, Grootes, Mintrop and Nadeau2001). Recently, Armitage et al. (Reference Armitage, Bueno-Ramírez, de Balbín-Behrmann, Martineau, Carrera-Ramírez, Fairchild and Southon2020) demonstrated a simple procedure for removing paraffin contaminants from Neolithic-age charcoal-based pigments. Their trials involved three 15-min sonication rinses in 1 mL of chloroform followed by base treatment to remove humates. This treatment removed paraffin traces based on both spectral and 14C analyses and was successful for both ground and consolidated charcoal with reported mass loss of 21–39%.
Our study adopted a chloroform wash modified from Armitage et al. (Reference Armitage, Bueno-Ramírez, de Balbín-Behrmann, Martineau, Carrera-Ramírez, Fairchild and Southon2020). Alternative methods were also evaluated in pretrials of this study and—while these methods proved effective—the chloroform protocol described below was both consistent and time efficient. Our final protocol consisted of first crushing approximately ∼50–200 mg of a contaminated charcoal fragment to the consistency of coarse sand; this enabled the solution to penetrate the sample while still allowing easy handling and decanting. The crushed (non-homogenized) sample was then immersed in 5 mL chloroform inside a scintillation vial for a total of three hours in a sonication bath with the solution changed every 60 min. After decanting the third and final chloroform rinse, the sample was completely dried under a fume hood. The sample was then rinsed in successive solutions of hexanes, ethanol, methanol, and Type 1 ultrapure water for an hour in each solvent at 70°C, with the respective solutions changed three times. Rinsing in heated vials helps preserve our fragile material, but for more structurally sound samples the hexanes – ethanol – methanol – water washes could be accomplished using a Soxhlet apparatus. The samples were dried completely in an oven set to 50°C before ABA pretreatment described in the “14C Analysis” section below.
FTIR Analysis
Samples at different stages in the trials were submitted to FTIR analysis to confirm the presence of paraffin in both archaeological and experimentally contaminated samples and to gauge the effects of different paraffin removal techniques. A Thermo Scientific Nicolet iS10 Smart FTIR device housed at the Arizona State Museum on the campus of the University of Arizona, Tucson was used for this study. Samples were compressed on a diamond window and spectra collected using ATR mode. Absorption was corrected for attenuated reflectance and atmospheric background. The paraffin used in the experimental treatments was compared to paraffin in a spectra library to confirm its spectral signature.
A simple diagnostic absorption intensity ratio was adopted in this study to classify paraffin contaminated specimens from uncontaminated ones. The relative absorbance (Rm/h) of the methyl/methylene band (∼2970–2915 and 2880–2850 cm–1) compared to the broad hydroxy band (∼3600–3200 cm–1) is quantified by the quotient of the maximum wavenumber intensities within the two respective bands. Other studies consistently find that the maximum hydroxy band intensity is higher than the methyl/methylene band in laboratory chars and charcoal, and so a Rm/h > 1.00 is used in this study as a first pass criterion for classifying samples as contaminated prior to 14C dating. Admittedly, the interpretation of the O-H band is complicated by the water content of the sample, with wavenumber intensity at 3200–3600 cm–1 positively related to the humidity of the sample. However, at relatively low humidity (<50%) the effect of water on the O-H band intensity is muted (Deeyai et al. Reference Deeyai, Suphantharika, Wongsagonsup and Dangtip2013: Figure 2; Celino et al. Reference Célino, Gonçalves, Jacquemin and Fréour2014: Figure 4). In this study, samples submitted to FTIR analysis were stored in sealed glass vials at both ambient indoor humidity (∼25% in Tucson, AZ) and in a vacuum oven. No difference was detected in the wavenumber intensities of identical samples stored under the different conditions, and it is assumed that the hydration level of the samples in our study are sufficiently low to allow interpretation of the hydroxy band wavenumber intensity.
14C Analysis
All samples (whether treated with the solvent washes or not) were subjected to acid-base-acid treatment to remove inorganic carbonates and humates (Olsson Reference Olsson1980). Samples were soaked in 3 N HCl at 70°C and then rinsed to a neutral pH with Type 1 water. This was followed by the base step that involved immersion in 1.2 N NaOH at 70°C overnight and then additional NaOH rinses as warranted until no discoloration was observed in the NaOH solution indicating humate removal. When samples showed signs of dissolution, they were rinsed in the base solution at room temperature until a clear solution was obtained. Samples were then soaked in 3 N HCl at 70°C for one hour and rinsed in Type 1 water to neutralize pH and to remove absorbed CO2.
Archaeological and known age samples were combusted, stable isotopic composition measured, and graphitized using an in-line EA-IRMS-AGE system consisting of a Vario ISOTOPE Select element analyzer coupled with an Elementar Isoprime PrecisIon mass spectrometer and IonPlus automated graphitization equipment. Radiocarbon measurements were performed on graphite targets at the Center for Applied Isotope Studies at the University of Georgia and radiocarbon content measured relative to SRM4990C, the Oxalic Acid II standard. Ten samples of archaeological charcoal were submitted to the University of California Irvine KECK Carbon Cycle Accelerator Mass Spectrometer Laboratory (UCIAMS), nine of which were for the purpose of replication. UCIAMS samples were combusted at 900°C in evacuated sealed quartz tubes in the presence of CuO oxidizer. Cryogenically purified CO2 was reduced to graphite at 560°C with hydrogen and iron powder catalysts. Results are background subtracted and corrected for isotope fractionation. Calibrations were performed against the IntCal20 data set (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Bronk Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards and Friedrich2020), using OxCal v 4.4.4 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a; Reference Bronk Ramsey2021). Replicate measurements were compared using the Difference()function in OxCal. The mean calibrated date of the replicate samples (where the difference overlapped zero at 95.4% confidence) was calculated using the R_Combine()function. Archaeological samples were calibrated in wiggle-matching D_sequence()models based upon Bronk Ramsey et al. (Reference Bronk Ramsey, van der Plicht and Weninger2001). To account for the in-built age of non-cutting dates, the wiggle-matched posterior of each non-cutting date was calibrated in their stratigraphic sequence with OxCal “charcoal” outlier models (Bronk-Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009b) or an empirical log-normal distribution for short ring segments from archaeological charcoal cross-sections provided in Kessler (Reference Kessler2021) and the resulting models compared.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Laboratory Contamination
Laboratory paraffin contamination produced charcoal samples with a waxy feel and white coatings visible on the surface and inside wood pores (Figure 4). This is similar to museum specimens known to have been conserved with paraffin. However, archaeological material initially not thought to been conserved with paraffin was revealed in pretrial FTIR analysis to contain probable paraffin residues. Pre-trial FTIR analysis also showed that interior rings may contain trace paraffin contamination despite the fact that outward signs of contamination are concentrated in the outer portion of the specimen. Therefore, while our laboratory contamination produced macroscopic and tactile characteristics consistent with paraffin-treated charcoal in museum collections, we do not consider visual or tactile clues to be definitive indicators of contamination.
Pretreatment with the solvent sequence eliminated outward indications of paraffin contamination for both known-age and archaeological charcoal samples. Mass loss during pretreatment averaged 33 percent (range = 29–40%) for known-age samples with the removal of paraffin contributing about 24 percent of this figure. The mass loss for archaeological samples averaged 64 percent (range = 33–97%). Base treatment for humate removal accounted for most of this loss and explains why the relatively fragile archaeological material exhibited much higher mass loss.
FTIR Analysis—Known Age Charcoal
Paraffin contamination produces a distinct FTIR spectra that helps identify it in charcoal. Table 2 summarizes characteristic wavenumber bands associated with each of the sample types in this study. As expected, the paraffin used to contaminate the known-age charcoal matches FTIR library spectra and is characterized by intense bands at ∼2920 cm–1 and ∼2850 cm–1 from C-H stretching of methylene, and these peaks dominate the spectra of paraffin-contaminated charcoal as well (Figure 5). Additional bands at ∼1470 cm–1 and ∼720 cm–1 observed in paraffin are due to C-H bending and rocking of methylene, consistent with the presence of hydrocarbons.
Material: P = paraffin, C = contaminated charcoal, U = uncontaminated charcoal, T = solvent-treated charcoal.
References: Cao et al. Reference Cao, Xiao, Xu, Shen and Jin2013 (1), Coates Reference Coates and Myers2000 (2), Patrova et al. Reference Pastorova, Botto, Arisz and Boon1994 (3), Sharma et al. 2008 (4), Stuart Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004 (5), Trompowski et al. Reference Trompowsky, de Melo Benites, Madari, Pimenta, Hockaday and Hatcher2005 (6), Yu et al. Reference Yu, Liu and Wu2012 (7).
All known-aged charcoal samples show a broad hydroxy absorption band between 3400 cm–1 and 3200 cm–1 (Figure 6). A low intensity band around 2600 cm–1 indicates O-H stretching of H-bonded carboxylic acids (Trompowski et al. Reference Trompowsky, de Melo Benites, Madari, Pimenta, Hockaday and Hatcher2005). All laboratory-produced charcoal in this study exhibits a low intensity wavenumber peak around 1700 cm–1 from C=O stretching of carbonyl compounds. The intense absorption bands at ∼1590 cm–1 and ∼1508 cm–1 are produced from aromatic ring vibrations with the higher intensity of the former band differentiating these hardwood samples from conifer species (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004).
For paraffin-contaminated charcoal, a band between ca. 1470–1430 cm–1 overlaps methylene C-H bending but is also consistent with various combinations of C-C and C=C vibrations of aromatic rings and endogenous aliphatic compounds found in lignin (Pastorova et al. Reference Pastorova, Botto, Arisz and Boon1994; Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004; Cao et al. Reference Cao, Xiao, Xu, Shen and Jin2013). That this same band is also present in uncontaminated charcoal (1461–1425 cm–1), suggests this band is not diagnostic of paraffin contamination. A broad absorption band with multiple small peaks between ∼825 cm–1 and ∼670 cm–1 is observed in all charcoal samples and probably reflects C-H out-of-plane bending in aromatic rings (Pastorova et al. Reference Pastorova, Botto, Arisz and Boon1994). Within this region, a low intensity peak at ∼715 cm–1 occurs in contaminated samples and may correspond to the methylene C-H rocking from paraffin, but it is difficult to interpret small peaks in this region of the spectrum.
The two contaminated charcoal samples not subjected to solvent washes have Rm/h values around 1.7 indicating significantly higher absorbance in the methylene band relative to the hydroxy band (Table 3). All known-age uncontaminated and contaminated solvent-treated charcoal samples have Rm/h < 1 (both averaging around 0.9), with the FTIR spectra closely similar to laboratory-produced wood, lignin, and cellulose chars analyzed in other studies (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Wooten, Baliga, Lin, Chan and Hajaligol2004; Liu et al. Reference Liu, Wang, Zheng, Luo and Cen2008; Yu et al. Reference Yu, Liu and Wu2012; Cao et al. Reference Cao, Xiao, Xu, Shen and Jin2013). This confirms our visual assessment of the FTIR spectra that the pretreatment protocol is effective at removing paraffin from lab-contaminated charcoal.
14C Analysis—Known Age Charcoal
A total of nine 14C dates were obtained on the known-age charcoal in this study are reported in Table 4. The effects of paraffin contamination have an unambiguous effect on the 14C ages of charcoal in this study. 14C dates on uncontaminated known-aged charcoal are obviously and significantly younger than the 14C dates of the same charcoal contaminated by paraffin (Figure 7). The uncontaminated solvent-treated known-age charcoal returned calibrated 14C dates with a combined calibrated date of 1826 ± 148 (2σ), consistent with their dendrochronologically determined true date of 1907 (Table 4). Paraffin-treated charcoal returned a combined calibrated date of 1246 ± 30 (2σ), showing that non-radioactive carbon is a larger constituent of contaminated samples than expected based on their true age. The fraction modern of the oldest measured 14C age of the three uncontaminated samples is 0.9797 ± 0.006 (2σ) and does not overlap at 2σ the fraction modern of the youngest measured 14C age of the two contaminated replicates at 0.9156 ± 0.0056. Calculating the difference between contaminated and uncontaminated samples shows that paraffin consolidants in charcoal result in potential age offsets ranging from 427 to 694 years (95.4% posterior density). Contaminated known-age charcoal treated with the solvent protocol returned 14C calibrated ages identical to the uncontaminated known-age material. The 14C dating agrees with the FTIR results and show that the solvent treatment is effective at removing paraffin consolidants from lab-contaminated charcoal.
FTIR Analysis—Archaeological Charcoal
FTIR spectra from archaeological charcoal is similar to charcoal produced in the lab from known-aged wood. An assortment of archaeological charcoal specimens from the Hawley Bell collection not subjected to pretreatment all showed signs of paraffin contamination consistent with the FTIR spectra from both pure paraffin and contaminated charcoal (Figure 8a). This held true for archaeological samples not showing outward signs for paraffin contamination such as a visible residue or waxy texture, suggesting that paraffin consolidant was applied consistently to charcoal samples from Mound 10 in the Hawley-Bell collection.
FTIR scans of solvent-treated archaeological specimens from Mound 10 in the Hawley-Bell collection revealed absorption bands at 2600 cm–1 from O-H stretching on carboxylic acids, 1705 cm–1 from C=O stretching of unconjugated carbonyls (ketones), 1585 cm–1 from C-C stretching of aromatic rings, and below 1400 cm–1 due to a variety of C-C, C-H, and C-O groups (Figure 8; see also Table 2). The broad absorption band across wavenumbers 3400–3200 cm–1 from O-H stretching was present across solvent-treated archaeological samples. As with lab-produced charcoal, low intensity absorption was present in archaeological samples at the methylene band around wavenumbers 2920 cm–1 and 2850 cm–1. In only a single treated archaeological sample (ring 38 of mxo10-193) did this methylene absorption band exceed the hydroxy band (Rm/h = 1.02) (Table 5). This sample was flagged as potentially contaminated and was included in subsequent 14C analysis to determine whether FTIR spectra could be used to screen pretreated charcoal for paraffin contamination in our study.
14C Analysis—Archaeological Charcoal
This study produced 32 new 14C dates from seven archaeological tree-ring segments that inform the late stages of construction on Mound 10 and help evaluate the paraffin removal protocol (Table 6). The 14C measurement obtained from the suspect sample (AA11663) was ∼280 14C years older than the next nearest ring in its segment. Calibrating this wiggle-match ring segment (mxo10-193) in an OxCal Outlier_Model(“RScaled”, T(5),U(0,4),”r”) applied to the suspect date revealed an offset of 273 ± 27 (1σ) years. This confirms the identification based on Rm/h that sample AA11663 contained traces of hydrocarbon contamination.
The contaminated sample was removed from the dataset and the replicate measurements were compared with the Difference()function. The 95.4% posterior density ranges of all the comparable measurements overlapped zero, and so replicates were combined using the R_Combine()function in the D_Sequence()models. The resulting wiggle-matched calibrated ages show generally good agreement with their relative placement in each ring sequence (A > 60.0) (Table 6, see also Supplement 1 for CQL code replicating all wiggle-match models). However, two dates—AA115661 and AA115664—were below the heuristic threshold of agreement. The 14C age of the AA115661 is at least 27 years younger than its expected age based on its position in ring sequence mxo10-193, while the 14C age of AA115664 is about 53 years younger than its replicate assay (UCIAMS259530) and is younger than the calibration data given its position in the ring sequence. In both cases, the combined agreement index of their respective D_Sequence()models are acceptable (Acomb > 60.0) and re-running the models without the low agreement dates has only a small effect (±2 years) on the modeled ages of the outermost rings. Therefore, these dates were retained in the D_Sequence()models for the sake of completeness.
Wiggle-matched cutting dates from context PE place tree procurement at 1372 ± 36 (2σ) (mxo10-28D) and 1365 ± 8 (2σ) (mxo10-173) (Figure 9). The cutting date from context CS places tree procurement at 1346 ± 70 (2σ) (Figure 10) with the most likely posterior density ranges being 1303–1326 (52.1%) or 1378–1395 (34.0%). Wiggle-matched non-cutting dates from context F8 date to 1366 ± 10 (2σ) (mxo10-12D), 1388 ± 8 (2σ) (mxo10-75), 1382 ± 10 (2σ) (mxo10-193) and could indicate tree-procurement slightly later than context PE (accounting for missing rings from the non-cutting dates) (Figure 11).
Modeling the wiggle-matched dates in hypothetical sequences with two different outlier models to account for in-built age helps shed light on the most likely posterior dates for the final construction episodes on Mound 10 (see Methods and Material for in-built age correction). The wiggle-matched posterior date distributions, derived independently and described above, were saved as prior distributions to be input into each sequence model. Context F8 was thought to have been overlapped by the final conical fill (Emerson Reference Emerson1943), and so a plausible sequence of events places context F8 before context CS, with the construction and use of context PE possible at any time in the sequence. In other words, the model assumes only that construction material used in F8 is older than that used in CS, and that construction material for PE may overlap either phase temporally (see Supplement 2 for the archaeological sequence models).
The model outputs are substantially similar regardless of the outlier model employed. The “empirical” outlier formulation results in higher model agreement (Amodel = 94.2) compared to the “charcoal” outlier (Amodel = 76.4) and the use of the former outlier results in wider posterior distributions suggesting it may provide somewhat more conservative age estimates (Figure 12), and so the results from the sequence employing the “empirical” outlier will be discussed further.
The prior information for the relative timing of F8 construction constrains the cutting date from context CS to the latter time period in its posterior density range or 1387 ± 8 (2σ) (the outlier model was not applied to cutting dates). The outlier model shifts a non-cutting date in context F8 to a younger age, and the Bayesian sequence suggests that construction of this context took place around 1381 ± 14 (2σ) based on the pooled mean and standard deviation of the three dates. The two sigma error ranges for the age estimate of F8 overlaps the cutting dates from context PE, which are unchanged in the sequence. These age estimates show that the palisaded enclosure (PE), the structure near the base of the conical (F8), and the structure on top the conical platform (CS) may be contemporaneous constructions with the age ranges for the cutting dates from PE overlapping the cutting date from CS, and in any case, certainly represent a short time frame. An interval query for the F8-CS sequence shows that these dates represent a duration of no more than 26 years (95.4% posterior density). This indicates that the end of Stage 3 and the beginning of Stage 4 are separated by no more than a single generation and may have been coeval.
CONCLUSIONS
This study achieved a number of important results. The solvent treatment employed here completely removed traces of paraffin contamination from 95% of archaeological material, and from 100% of experimentally contaminated samples. FTIR analysis is a viable means for screening samples for paraffin (or other hydrocarbon) contamination prior to 14C analysis as the methylene peak produced by paraffin is easily identifiable. In our case study, the ratio of the absorbance intensity of the methylene and hydroxy bands (Rm/h) predicted the presence of contamination in the single archaeological sample in which pretreatment failed to remove all paraffin. The hydration level of the sample will affect the validity of this metric, and the fact that this analysis was conducted in Tucson, Arizona is not immaterial to our interpretation. However, for samples stored and analyzed at similar low humidity levels, the relative absorbance intensity of the methylene and hydroxy bands could be a useful metric for interpreting 14C offsets in cases where contamination is possible but uncertain.
Dates from final architectural contexts on Mound 10 are remarkably consistent and point to final construction on the main platform mound (Stage 3) beginning no earlier than the 1340s. The dates for the structure (context CS) built on the apex of the conical platform (Stage 4) indicate it was constructed around 1390 and probably within a generation of the completion of Stage 3. While the end boundary inferred from this dataset alone does not allow a precise estimate for the terminal use of Mound 10, in light of the consensus view that Kincaid was unoccupied by the middle fifteenth century, events surrounding Stage 4 of Mound 10 probably occurred in the final generation or two of Kincaid occupation.
The resolution of this reconstruction is enabled by seven wiggle-matched dates on short (≤60 rings) charcoal tree-ring segments, three of which are cutting dates. The internal consistency of these dates and their coherency with the known cultural chronology of Kincaid supports the efficacy of the solvent treatment employed in the study. Obtaining high-resolution dates from short ring segments in archival, paraffin-conserved charcoal is an important finding for Mississippian archaeology because it demonstrates how this material can contribute to new high-resolution regional histories.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding for this study came from the National Science Foundation (Award No. 2020313). Todd Lange, Li Cheng, and John Southon are thanked for their assistance with 14C analysis. We are grateful to Peter Brewer, Kota Fleming, and archival staff at the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research for cataloging the Hawley Bell collection and their help with accessing the material analyzed in this study. Two anonymous reviewers are greatly thanked for their attention to this manuscript and comments that improved the final work.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2022.84