4.5 Article

A comparative analysis of wet and dry ashing techniques for the extraction of phytoliths from plant material

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 8, Pages 875-886

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1006/jasc.2000.0623

Keywords

phytolith analysis; sample preparation methods; reference material; dry ashing; wet ashing; phytolith morphology; morphological change

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Two methods are commonly used for the extraction of phytoliths from plant material to be used as reference int he analysis of archaeological phytolith samples: (1) spodograms or dry ashings; and (2) acid digestions or wet ashing. It has been suggested that these techniques may modify the resultant samples in different ways. Dry ashing, in particular, has been implicated as a cause of shrinkage and warping in phytolith assemblages when incineration occurs at greater than or equal to 450(0)C. The results of a morphometric comparative analysis between the dry ashing and wet ashing methods do not support these claims. This study establishes the differences in patterns of dimension and curvature of short bilobate phytoliths and of elongate phytoliths both subjected to dry and wet ash preparation are not statistically significant. There is, therefore, no detectable evidence of morphological impact as a result of these methods. This finding implies that any difference that do occur in phytolith size and curvature are typical, possibly random permutation within assemblages, or that they are the result of variation in leaf cell structure rather than the consequence of a particular extrication procedure. This suggests that the practice of using different methods of preparation of reference samples for fossil analysis can be reliably continued.

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