Abstract

Man-made ancient Chinese barium copper silicate pigments: Chinese (Han) Purple, BaCuSi2O6; Chinese (Han) Blue, BaCuSi4O10; Chinese Dark Blue, BaCu2Si2O7 (in summary called Chinese blues), and platelet-like crystals of BaSnSi3O9 were detected on mural paintings of a tomb in Luoyang City, Henan Province, China, dated to Western Han Dynasty (206 BC–8 AD). The pigments of the LY01 and LY02 samples were analyzed by archaeometrical methods: powder X-ray diffractometry (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM–EDX) and micro-Raman spectroscopy. While the artificial nature of the ancient barium copper silicates was undoubted, the synthetic or mineral origin of BaSnSi3O9 of these murals had to be clarified. Involvement of the rare mineral pabstite Ba(Sn,Ti,Zr)Si3O9 from the Tian Shan mountains could be ruled out due to absence of Ti and Zr in the elemental composition. Tin compounds as admixtures to the lead minerals—the latter required as flux additive for the preparation of the Chinese blues—or tin admixtures to pristine barium starting minerals could be excluded, as well as the use of tin containing mineral mushistonite (CuSn(OH)6), primarily intended to be applied as copper source. Related to the findings for the production of Egyptian Blue (CaCuSi4O10), bronze or bronze scrap including also corroded material was used intending copper recycling. For the synthesis of the Luoyang Chinese blues only low amounts of bronze or bronze scrap were required providing the additional advantage to form in presence of air a tin/lead oxide flux with lowered vitrification temperatures and viscosities. This marked the advent of an ‘innovative production technology’ avoiding addition of large amounts of lead minerals as an effective lead-only flux. Despite of the chemical similarity to production of Egyptian Blue, the tin/lead based developments for the Chinese blues were anticipated to be independent excluding technology transfer from ancient Egypt. For further substantiation of the appearance of pabstite in the Luoyang Chinese blues a contemporary independent synthesis was sought, carried out under conditions similar to those of the barium copper silicate syntheses (1000 °C, but absence of a flux) starting from cassiterite (SnO2), quartz (SiO2) and witherite (BaCO3).

Highlights

  • The man-made barium copper silicate pigments Chinese (Han) Purple (­BaCuSi2O6), Chinese (Han) Blue ­(BaCuSi4O10) and Chinese Dark Blue (­BaCu2Si2O7) were widely used as blue and purple pigments in ancient China during the Warring States Period (475–221 BC) until the end of Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD)

  • Ancient Chinese bronze or bronze scrap has besides tin low lead content generating a lead/tin oxide flux directly when used as a starting material of the Chinese blues

  • Plateletlike triangular crystals were characterized as pabstite ­(BaSnSi3O9)

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Summary

Introduction

The man-made barium copper silicate pigments Chinese (Han) Purple (­BaCuSi2O6), Chinese (Han) Blue ­(BaCuSi4O10) and Chinese Dark Blue (­BaCu2Si2O7) (in summary called the Chinese blues) were widely used as blue and purple pigments in ancient China during the Warring States Period (475–221 BC) until the end of Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD). Preliminary SEM–EDX studies searching for barium copper silicates in the pigment layers of a mural from early Western Han Dynasty (206 BC–8 AD) from a tomb of Luoyang City and bulk purplish-blue and yellow-green pigments of a Tomb Guard Jar of late Eastern Han Dynasty (25–220 AD) from Sanmenxia City, China, revealed high tin contents. The Raman spectra of the LY01 sample displayed besides the pabstite spectrum an additional small band at 634 cm−1, which was ascribed to the presence of cassiterite ­(SnO2) (RRUFF, ID R040017) (Fig. 2b) supposed to originate from tin containing starting materials transformed via chemical reactions of the pigment preparation (Chapter 4). Based on the result of the independent experiment and the Raman analysis we conclude that the triangle shaped crystals of the SEM images of Fig. 3 correspond to pabstite

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