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A Preservative Compound for Archaeological Materials

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

A compound is described which has been used in the field for consolidation of bone, shell, stone, pottery, fabric, and so forth. It has also been used in the laboratory with satisfactory results. This preparation can be applied to damp materials in the ground and allows for the preservation of otherwise nonrecoverable items. The ease of preparation and application makes it useful without requiring special training. The compound is water soluble and, importantly, the treatment is reversible, so that if different treatment is desired in the future the compound can be removed.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1974

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References

Brown, Margaret Kimball 1971 An eighteenth century trade coat. Plains Anthropologist 16:52.Google Scholar
Chemaster Corporation n.d. Ethulose: water-soluable ethylhydroxyethylcellulose. New York. Mimeo.Google Scholar
Geijer, Agnes 1961 Modocoll as a preservative for textiles and other fragile materials. Mimeo translation from Svenska Museer, Stockholm.Google Scholar